Tag: Pregnancy

  • Why doesn’t A Woman’s Body Reject Fetus As Alien

    An interesting article and one wonders what nature can do ?

    Story:

    Foetus
    Foetus 24 Weeks

    Of all the miracles of life, here’s by far the most miraculous of all: Women’s bodies, for the most part, do not attack and destroy the fetus growing inside them.

    From an immunologic point of view, the fetus is an alien. Like a germ. Or an organ transplant. And your body is programmed to mount an assault on foreigners. But my fetus is half me, you say. And so, you may suspect—as others have before you—that the “half-me” part signals the body to avoid all-out warfare. This makes emotional sense! But the success of surrogate moms and donor eggs—with women gestating babies produced by the eggs of other women, their bodies accepting the presence of a fetus that is not “half-them”—proves that idea wrong.

    So that leads us to the big question: Why does pregnancy even work?

    Pregnancy, as Yale School of Medicine’s Harvey Kliman sees it, is a metaphor for marriage. The placenta is controlled by the father’s genes, the embryo by the mother’s. Each side has its own agenda. Yet, the key to a successful union—whether it be mother and fetus, or husband and wife—is compromise. The details of this compromise have always been a mystery, but in the past few years, scientists seem to be edging closer to understanding the specific negotiations that occur deep within the cells of the women’s body that allow the fetus to escape destruction.

    For years, doctors have been eyeing T cells, the immune cells that attack and destroy invaders (which should include the fetus). A few years ago, a team of researchers at NYU School of Medicine, lead by Adrian Erlebacher in the department of pathology, discovered something that had never been seen before: In pregnant mice, even when the T cells were experimentally nudged into attack mode, they did not bite.

    These early studies prompted the NYU team to dig deeper, trying to figure out the chain of events that would stop the T-cell attack. They eyed a certain family of genes that, when working properly, recruit and send T cells marching toward invaders. But in the pregnant mouse, the genes were silenced in the decidua—the tissue surrounding the fetus and the placenta—by a chemical that attached to the genes’ proteins, altering the way the genes look and therefore how they act. With this physical change, the genes can no longer communicate “attack!” to the T cells.

    The upshot: In a pregnant mouse, at least, the genes can’t do their job, which means that the cascade of events that would lead to an immune assault on the fetus never happens.

    http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2012/07/maternal_fetal_bond_why_doesn_t_a_pregnant_woman_s_immune_system_attack_the_fetus_.html

  • Be-getting Good Children, Sexual Rules ,More Details,Hinduism

    Pregnancy.
    Sleeping Position during Pregnancy

    Hindu Samskaras gives the pride of place to Garbha Dhaanam,the Rite performed to be get Good Children over other 39 Samskaaras by placing it at the top of the list and , in a Man’ Life, it is the First Samskara to be performed as an Adult.

    In it is the Hindu’s Belief that a son will relieve the sin of the parents of the results of their actions .

    A son, according to Hindu Sastras is a reflection of Oneself in as much as he is expected to continue the action sequences set in motion by his parents.

    He is temperamentally more suited because of the genes in him .

    Therefore, any action performed by the Father will affect the son directly or indirectly.

    The great Tamil work Tirukkural states that one’s worthiness is known by his Offspring for he is the remnant of the parent’s results of action.

    ‘தக்கார் தகவிலர் என்ப ரவரர் எச்சத்தார்க் காணப்படும்  .’

    எச்சம் என்பது இங்கு மிகுதி என்னும் பொருளில் அமைந்துள்ளது .
    It is also believed that one who does not have a son will suffer from the Hell designated as ‘Puth’.
    Hence the name  ‘Puthran’ in Sanskrit for son.
    Here Puth means, not a hell where one suffers physically and mentally, but as being born again  for the non-performance of Rites after one’s Death by his son.
    After the ‘Retiring Stage’ Vaanaprasthaa- of one’s Life, the son takes care of the worldly affairs of his Father , including looking after his mother while the father meditates for the Realisation of The Self.
    Just before Death, the sun places his Father’s head on his left thigh and recites the ‘Karna Mantra’ in the Father’s right ear to enable the father to attain Salvation.
    The mantra is from the Bhagavad Gita.
    Sarva Dharaman Pratijyasya mamekam Sarnam VrajaI
    Ahamthva Sarva Paapepyo Mokshayichchaami Ma suchaII
    ‘Leave all the duties enjoined to you and surrender to Me, I shall Grant you Salvation)-Bhagavad Gita Chap-18.
    To ensure that one begets a good son Garbha Dhaanam recommends some tips.
    I have stated some of the them in my earlier blog.
    Some more points.
    One should have a son to perform the Rites  for the Ancestors.
    Man in enjoined to have inter course at least once in his married Life.
    Later it is not obligatory.
    (Hinduism is of the Opinion that the act of Sex is to be get children in the interest of the son performing th Rites for the ancestors and the pleasure one gets out of Sex is only an unintended offshoot.
    This also indicates that the Hindus, though they may have sex with their wives, child is not ensured for the Sastras mention Days on which one can have Sex.This tallies with the ‘Safe Dates’ of modern Medicine.
    With  whom one should not have Sex.
    1. Pregnant woman,
    2. One who is unwilling,
    3. Diseased
    4. Woman of uncontrollable temper
    5. One who is Hungry
    How to  be with Wife.
    • Cloth beneath the Waist is not to be removed.
    • A small lamp is be lit.
    • If it is the first time, the Yagnapaveedham(Sacred Thread), should be worn as usual, that is, it should cross the Left shoulder.
    • At other times it should be ‘Niveedhi’-as a Garland around the neck.
    • After the act, both should take bath.
  • Girl carries Father’s Child, says she is in Love!

    Excellent!

    Last year Penny Lawrence (28) tracked down her long-lost father Garry Ryan (46). Lawrence is now pregnant with his child and claims to be in love with her father.

    Garry Ryan was born in Dublin but moved to the US with his family when he was two. Lawrence’s mother met him, fell pregnant but Ryan left before the child was born. Her mother returned to Ireland.

    When Lawrence was four and living back in Ireland her mother died and her maternal grandparents raised her. They died when she was 18-years-old.

    Lawrence then became fixated on finding her only remaining relative, her father. Last year she found him in Houston, Texas.

    After several daily phone calls she flew to America to surprise him.

    Ryan said that the pair felt an instant physical attraction and they soon began a relationship. Lawrence is now pregnant with his child.

    Their situation they say can be accounted for by Genetic Sexual Attraction, a term which has been used since the 1980s to describe feelings of attraction between blood relatives who meet first as adults. There is a theory that humans are attracted to faces similar to their own. Also not meeting until both are adults means that normal sexual taboo between relatives has not had time to develop.

    Speaking to the Irish Sun Newspaper Lawrence said “We are not committing incest, but are victims of GSA. We’ve never experienced a father-daughter relationship, so we’re just like any other strangers who meet in adulthood.”

    Lawrence revealed that her three month scan showed no defects. The couple now plan to proceed with the pregnancy and set up a home together.

    They say they do realize that their relationship is illegal and are now afraid that they will be ordered apart by the courts.

    He said “It’s no different than if I met Penny in a bar. I’d have fallen for her as I have now. It doesn’t feel like we are doing anything wrong.

      http://www.irishcentral.com/news/Irish-woman-carrying-her-fathers-child-claims-theyre-in-love-118566849.html#ixzz1wBuxpNP4

  • Ultra Sound Scan Unsafe For Babies,Scientific Study

    There is a fad going on Ultra Sound Scan.

    Ultrasound scan. Provided as-is. Please feel f...
    Ultrasound scan. Provided as-is. Please feel free to categorise, add description, crop or rename. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

    Doctors suggest Ultra Sound Scan the moment you go to check your pregnancy.

    Immediately thereafter, they( at least in India), they ask you to do a Scan on the 45 th /90 th Day.

    In between they tell you to do it a couple of times more, ostensibly  to check whether the Foetus is developing normally.

    Some times they tell you they could not get the image clearly as the Foetus was turnng its head the otherside!

    Beware of these 15% Commission Doctors.

    Because the Foetus can not express its thoughts, do not harm it.

    Is ultrasound safe … or worth it?
    Although women are now routinely offered several ultrasound scans during a pregnancy, costing health services worldwide millions of pounds every year, its safety has never been tested. This assumption of safety has led to:

    • researchers who are studying foetal behaviour reassuring women volunteering to take part in their trials that exposures of up to an hour and a half are safe
    • commercial companies offering parents lengthy ‘videos’ of their baby moving inside the womb. (The US Food and Drink Administration (FDA) warns that ultrasound cannot be considered harmless, even at low levels, and is considering regulatory action against these companies)
    • companies being granted safety licenses to offer parents- to-be hand-held Doppler ultrasound devices with which, theoretically, they could expose their babies to hours of ultrasound every day

    Several trials suggest that Governments should be more concerned, e.g.:

    • When women at risk of giving birth preterm were examined once a week to determine the state of their cervix, just over half (52%) of those who were examined using ultrasound went on to have a preterm birth compared to a quarter (25%) of those given a manual pelvic examination.
      Ultrasound scanning gave no benefit over manual examination [1]
    • When 1,246 UK women were given a monthly Doppler ultrasound scan of their umbilical and uterine arteries from the 19th to the 32nd week of pregnancy, seventeen of their babies died at or around the time of birth, as opposed to only seven in the 1,229-strong unDopplered control group. The Doppler scanning had only identified a possible problem in one of the babies [2]

    Ed.- (i) AIMS Journal’s Jean Robinson is concerned that no research has ever been done on the effects of:

    • exposing even younger foetuses to ultrasound, an increasingly common practice
    • submitting foetuses to exposures of an hour or more, as in the commercial applications described above

    She also points out that:

    • because ultrasound is now almost universally used, it has become almost impossible to assemble a control group of completely unexposed children. Only degrees of exposure can now be compared
    • the claim that ultrasound encourages bonding between mother and child has also never been demonstrated scientifically

    (ii) Other studies, however, suggest that ultrasound is more efficient than manual pelvic examination at detecting major malformations and twins early. [3]

    [1] Lorenz,RP et al. American Journal of Obstetric Gynaecology 1990;162(6):1603-607
    [2] Davies,JL et al. Lancet 1992;ii:1299-303
    [3] Saari-Kemppainen,A et al. Lancet 1990;336(8712):387-91

    (11453) Beverley Beech. AIMS Journal

     

    Yes, just looking can hurt

    Having one or more ultrasound scan to see your baby in the womb has become almost the norm. Although there has never been any significant research to prove it, the practice is assumed totally safe by doctors and parents-to-be alike. In fact, the opposite is true.

    Three randomised controlled trials of Doppler Sound, the powerful form of ultrasound now used in most hospitals, have found an up to fourfold increase in perinatal (just before or after birth) deaths. [1] One large study found 20 miscarriages in the group given ultrasound scans, but none in the group which was not. [2] Another reported a doubling of pre-term labour in the scanned group. [3] Another linked ultrasound scanning to retardation of the baby’s growth in the womb. [4]

    Animal-based studies suggest that there may be subtler effects which have, to date, not been measured in humans. Monkeys repeatedly exposed to ultrasound showed clear behavioural problems, such as social withdrawal. Another study using monkeys found evidence of low body weight and poor muscle tone.

    Experiments with guinea pigs showed that it could raise the temperature of brain tissue near bone by as much as 5.1°C. [5] If the same occurs in human babies at the time the developing brain is at its most vulnerable (16 weeks old, when ultrasound scanning tends to be carried out), it is possible that vital cells could be damaged or destroyed with little possibility of replacement. This could lead to long-term neurological damage. [6] Changes in brain development sometimes lead to lefthandedness. [7] Not a problem in itself, but lefthandedness is linked to an increased risk of dyslexia, [8] learning difficulties[9] and speech delay. [10]

    The argument for ultrasound scanning revolves around its ability to detect abnormalities early enough to abort. Firstly, several studies have shown that ultrasound does not improve outcomes for babies overall, and that there is no medical reason to propose a scan in 80% of cases. Secondly, ultrasound can only detect a handful of the 5000+ potential chromosomal abnormalities. It is most successful at detecting Down’s syndrome, picking up 80% of cases, but even here can diagnose Down’s syndrome when it isn’t actually present. Scanning can pick up `things that shouldn’t be there’ – resulting, again, in the abortion of healthy foetuses – when that `thing’ often disappears during the pregnancy. Parents who decide not to abort are put through months of unnecessary worry. In one instance at a hospital in Cardiff (Wales), scans detected `dead’ babies which were subsequently found to be alive just before the induced miscarriage was to be performed.

    Finally, scans can pick up abnormalities about which nothing can be done.

    [1] Lancet 1992;340:1229-303
    [2] Lancet 1990;336:387-91
    [3] American Journal of Obstetric Gynaecology 1990;162:1603-10
    [4] Lancet 1993;342:887-91
    [5] Horder,MM et al. Ultrasound in Medicine & Biology 1998;24(5):697-704
    [6] Birth 1986;13:29-37
    [7] Kieler,H et al. Epidemiology 2001;12(6):618-23
    [8] Obstetrics & Gynaecology 1984;63:194-200
    [9] Neurotox. Teratol. 1995;17:179-88
    [10] Canadian Med. Assoc. Jnl. 1993;14 9:1435-40

    (6698) Pat Thomas. Natural Parent 1.5.00 p26

    Left handedness in ultrasound babies

    New research suggests that ultrasound tests may affect babies’ brains. Looking back at 2161 babies born 1979-81 Norwegian researchers found that those who had been exposed to ultrasound were 30% more likely to be left-handed. This could have happened by chance but they believe it may indicate “a sensitive index of subtle changes in the development of the brain”.
    (5135) Salvesen,KA et al. British Medical Journal 1993;307(6897):159-64

    Ultrasound scans linked to brain damage in babies
    A third study has linked lefthandedness to ultrasound scanning, suggesting that it has caused genetic damage in the brain. In this case 7000 men whose mothers had ultrasound scans in the ’70s were compared to 170,000 men whose mothers did not. There was a significant increased rate of lefthandedness in the 7,000 men who had been scanned when in the womb and, critically, an even higher increase in those born after 1975, when doctors introduced a routine second scan. Lefthandedness is linked to an increased risk of a range of conditions, e.g.learning difficulties, dyslexia and epilepsy. The study was conducted on men because male babies’ brains continue to develop later than female babies’ brains, making them more susceptible to damage from external factors.

    In Britain, lefthanded people now form 11% of the population, compared to just 5% in the 1920s. The researchers have estimated that only a fifth of this doubling can be accounted for by a relaxation on the old practice of suppressing lefthandedness.

    (8663) Kieler,H et al. Epidemiology 2001;12(6):618-23
    Courtesy of Robert Matthews. Sunday Telegraph 9.12.2001

    No link with childhood leukaemia
    A large case-controlled study from Sweden was unable to show any link between the use of ultrasound examination of babies in the womb and childhood leukaemia. In the preamble to the research description, however, the authors remind us that other studies have shown that ultrasound can cause membrane changes which might affect the embryo’s development as well as postnatal development, and that ultrasound has been associated with lefthandedness.

    (6146) Naumburg,E et al. British Medical Journal 29.1.00 p282

    Ultrasound – small babies catch up
    In 1993 Australian research [1] found some evidence that foetuses exposed to five sessions of ultrasound imaging and continuous-wave Doppler flow studies between the eighteenth and thirty-eighth week of pregnancy tended to be born smaller and shorter than babies given a single ultrasound scan in the eighteenth week.

    Some good news
    The team followed the babies’ progress for the next eight years. By the time the babies were a year old, there were no significant differences in size. When the children underwent standard tests of childhood speech, language, behaviour and neurological development at ages two, three, five and eight, it suggested that the children’s neurological development had been normal as well.

    Ed.- (i) These findings come as a relief, but the fact that the repeated ultrasound or Doppler scans reduced the foetus’ growth is still cause for alarm. Doppler scans are not the same as ultrasound scans. They are used to measure blood flow in the foetus’s arteries and expose the foetus to larger doses of ultrasound.

    AIMS Journal’s Jean Robinson commented as follows:

    The Doppler and ultrasound imaging machines used in the original 1993 trial were weaker than those used these days. No research on the safety of today’s machinery has been carried out

    The researchers are still concerned by the apparent link between boy’s exposure to ultrasound and an increased likelihood of being left-handed.{2] They intended to examine this issue when the children were ten

    [1] Newnham,JP et al. Lancet 1993;342:887-91
    [2] Salvesen,KA and Eik-Ness,SH. Ultrasound Obstetrical Gynaecology 1999;13:241-46

    (11454) Newnham,JP et al. Lancet 2004;364(9450):2038-44

    http://www.greenhealthwatch.com/newsstories/newschildren/ultrasound-is-it-safe.html

  • Ten Year Old Gives Birth to a Girl Video

     

    A 10-year-old girl has given birth to a healthy baby in northeastern Colombia. A caesarean section was carried out, and the newborn girl weighed in at over five pounds. Natural birth is considered almost medically impossible for a 10-year-old, because the pelvis is not yet well-defined. (SOUNDBITE) (Spanish) GYNAECOLOGIST FABIO GONZALEZ SAYING: “Yes, she is a young girl from the Wayuu tribe. She is 10 years of age and this is her first pregnancy. She is originally from the Manaure municipality and arrived at the clinic with a 39-week pregnancy with a delayed intrauterine growth stage. In this particular case, it was critical to perform a caesarian section due to the circumstances of the patient and pregnancy. The baby is growing healthy and at birth weight approximately 2,500 grams.” The circumstances surrounding her becoming pregnant at such a young age are unknown. The case will be investigated by police, adhering to the tribe’s laws. Sophia Soo, Reuters.
    http://www.reuters.com/video/2012/04/10/10-year-old-gives-birth-in-colombia?videoId=233048004&videoChannel=2602