Usually not.
A fibroid should be a round mass in the wall of the uterus. A dead fetus would not be round and would be in the uterine cavity.
Dead
Uterine fibroids are the most common pelvic tumor.The cause of uterine fibroid tumors is unknown. Oral contraceptives and pregnancy lower the risk of developing new fibroid tumors.Fibroids may be present in 15 - 20% of women in their reproductive years -- the time after starting menstruation for the first time and before menopause. Fibroids may affect 30 - 40% of women over age 30. Fibroids occur 2 to 3 times more frequently in African-American women than in Caucasian women.The growth of a fibroid seems to depend on the hormone estrogen. As long as a woman with fibroids is menstruating, the fibroids will probably continue to grow, usually slowly.Fibroids rarely affect females younger than 20 or who are postmenopausal.Fibroids begin as small seedlings that spread throughout the muscular walls of the uterus. They can be so tiny that you need a microscope to see them. However, they can also grow very big. They may fill the entire uterus, and may weigh several pounds. Although it is possible for just one fibroid to develop, usually there is more than one.Sometimes, a fibroid hangs from a long stalk, which is attached to the outside of the uterus. Such a fibroid is called a pedunculated fibroid. It can become twisted and cause a kink in blood vessels feeding the tumor. This type of fibroid may require surgery.SymptomsSensation of fullness or pressure in lower abdomenPelvic cramping or pain with periodsAbdominal fullness, gasIncrease in urinary frequencyHeavy menstrual bleeding (menorrhagia), sometimes with the passage of blood clotsSudden, severe pain due to a pedunculated fibroid, incidence, and risk factors
At nineteen weeks, a fetus is about the size of a mango, measuring around 6 inches long and weighing approximately 8.5 ounces. It has developed more defined facial features, including eyebrows and eyelashes, and its body is covered in fine hair called lanugo. The fetus is active, moving around and kicking, although these movements might not be felt by the mother yet.
When dead or dormant, they look like a ball of dead vegetable matter. When watered they turn into something fuzzy green or a fern, as there are two plants by this name , but have the same Resuurection properties.
It would be better to look at living cells instead of dead cells, because living cells give you information about what you're researching, knowing you can see their movements and living organelles, which tell you absolutely nothing when they're dead.
The fetus is about 3 inches long and weighs nearly an ounce. You can have a funeral if you want. That is your choice. There is nothing that says you have to have a funeral when you miscarry this early. I've added a picture in the link below of what a 12 weeks fetus look like in the womb.
There is no "syndrome." That is what a fetus looks like.
See the Related Link below.
He is dead so does not look like anything.
He is dead so does not look like anything.
The fetus is passed during the bleeding of a miscarriage. If it's in the first trimester, the fetus is smaller than a prune, so would look like a large clot.
Check out this link and you can see what a fetus looks like at 16 weeks. Apparantly it can get the hiccups at this stage! http://www.paternityangel.com/Preg_info_zone/WeekByWeek/Weekly16.htm
He is dead so does not look like anything.
A decaying dead body
10 weeks a baby has everything an adult has, just smaller...
They look like dead people because they are supposed to symbolize dead people.
look in the dictionary