Unless a doctor has diagnosed a medical condition, many women go on to having a normal birth with their second child, after a c-section.
Probably a cesarean section to remove a baby.
it is done when the baby comes out first with the leg.
A cesarean is when a doctor makes a C shaped cut in a woman's virgina by the birth canal so he/she can take the baby out. in some cases, a baby is breech so the mother has no choice but to have a cesarean.
The first incision opens the abdomen, usually horizontal across and above the pubic bone. The second transverse incision opens the uterus. The amniotic sac is ruptured and the baby delivered.
cesarean section
That is one spelling, Cesarean, also Caesarean or Caesarian, referring to a cesarean section (c-section), the surgical delivery of a baby.(not always seen capitalized).
Of course, but it is totally dependant. There has to be aproblem with baby or mother in order to have a scheduled cesarean
cesarean sectionm
Yes, you can have a vaginal birth after cesarean (VBAC). If you have a supportive care provider your chances of having a successful VBAC are 2 in 3, the same as a first time mother's chances of having a vaginal birth. For more information about the risks of VBAC and risks of repeat cesarean check out ican-online.org.
The correct spelling is "cesarean." This term refers to a surgical procedure in which a baby is delivered through an incision made in the mother's abdomen and uterus.
Cesarean section.
Normal delivery is birth of the baby emerging through the vagina into the outside world, as nature intended. Caesarean delivery is delivery of the baby by a surgical incision into the abdomen, then the womb, to extract the baby directly from the womb. It is so-called because it was supposedly the way Julius Caesar came into this world.