No in the first place a baby's head is disproportionately large if looked at by adult standards. shaking a baby may cause brain damage however it wont make a baby's head bigger then it is supposed to be. There are conditions where baby's and children have much bigger heads then normal but these have nothing to do with shaken baby syndrome.
"had shaken" is the correct option.
no there must be another reason
"Shaken" is the correct spelling, if you mean the past tense of "shake".
on the scall from 1-10 I would say 5%. if you have a baby in that condition than you have half a chance of him or her coming out normal.
Down syndrome is something you are born with; it is not something that will suddenly "appear."
The nursing home has to have a valid reason to refuse a patient. Refusing a patient because they have Downs Syndrome would not be valid.
yep it would cos of the pressure
Radioactive waste would cause unborn babies to die/ have mutations.
The minute insect would simply not be shaken from my arm.
I would say "NO". I have applied brakes on a "wash-board" gravel road that shook the car very hard. If the baby is strapped into an approved car seat that is mounted to a standar car seat, the vibration should not be a problem.
No, a karyotype shows if a person has Turner syndrome.
An explosive eruption is similar to opening a can of soda that has been shaken because, when a can of soda is shaken, the CO2 dissolved in the soda is released and pressure builds up. when the can is opened, the soda shoots out, just as lava shoots out of a volcano during an explosive eruption.