It will be born with a sensory defect such as blindness, deafness etc.
Right after you come to your senses. Peace :)
Both.
With some women it can go undiscovered for weeks. Others will expell the fetus right away.
Right
I believe that it's coming out in 2013. or mabe even sooner if you ask. me just trust your h20 senses. Your senses might be right 20/cent right.
That sounds about right for a 10 week fetus. The size limits are between 0.9 and 1.2 inches.
Yes
Your muscles that were broken down during workout start repairing themselves using the energy and protein you provide in your diet. This is what causes our muscles to develop and grow.
Implantation occurs in the endometrium of the uterus, where the fertilized egg attaches and begins to develop. Placentation occurs in the placenta, which forms from tissue of both the mother and the embryo, providing nutrients and oxygen to the developing fetus.
The ethical considerations surrounding the fetus' right to life in the context of abortion involve balancing the rights of the fetus with the rights of the pregnant person. This raises complex questions about when personhood begins, bodily autonomy, and the potential harm to the fetus. Different ethical perspectives, such as utilitarianism, deontology, and virtue ethics, offer varying viewpoints on this issue. Ultimately, the debate centers on how to navigate the conflicting rights and interests involved in abortion.
When it happens. Live your life and it happens when it happens. Don't search for the right time, it will find you.
That is a good question! You get the oxygenated blood from the placenta via umbilical vein in case of the fetus. This vein enters the liver of the fetus. The blood then goes to right atrium of the fetus. The lungs are closed in the fetus. So the blood goes to left atrium through foramen ovale to bypass the pulmonary circulation of the fetus. After the birth of the baby, baby takes the first breath. The lungs get inflated. Blood starts to flow via lungs. This closes the foramen ovale. The marking remains there on the wall between both the atria.