What are fetal hiccups?

fetal hiccups occur when the membrane of the unborn child was closed, usually due to breathing in amniotic fluid. They are considered normal and often feel rhythmically, such as the heart rhythm in the womb that can often be felt from the outside. Some unborn children tend to hiccups more than others, even several times every day and the same formula can continue as soon as they are born. Children's hiccups usually start in the second or third trimester, although sometimes they can also start in the first trimester. Although it may seem that once they are born, the child is annoying, the fetal hiccups do not tend to cause discomfort in the unborn child and can even calm it to sleep in the womb.

There is usually a reason for unborn children's hiccups, as well as there when children and adults get them. The fruits practice breathing in the womb and because they are surrounded by amniotic fluid, they often breathe in and out. When he enters the lungs and then leaves, he closes the membrane, resulting in a fetal hicpoharmy. Since the developed nervous system is necessary for hiccups, unborn children's hiccups are not usually recorded until the second or third trimester, at this point it is a sign of proper growth.

Another reason for fetal hiccups is the practicing of suction reflex and swallowing, allowing most children to capture their mother's breasts to eat after food. Fruits that do not practices this habit may not be able to effectively prevent milk from entering their lungs and suffocating them when they eat. In addition, there is a reason to believe that fetal hiccups can help regulate heart rate in the third trimester. Therefore, the fetal hiccup is not only normal, but it is usually a good thing.

Despite the fact that fetal hiccups should be considered good signs of growth, doctors sometimes worry about this type of fetal movement. It is probably because only sometimes it means that the unborn child does notIt gets sufficient air due to the compression of the umbilical cord. This is when the cord wings around the baby's neck so that it cannot breathe, causing its heart rate to become fast. The main symptom of this problem is a sudden increase in fetal hiccups, followed by a lot of fetal movement as soon as the air supply is limited. Ultrasound should be immediately sought if they occur to these symptoms, although the cord tends to wrap around the neck over time than suddenly.

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