 TTC ArticlesEarly
Pregnancy Week-by-Week Calendar
Fetal Growth & Your First Pregnancy Signs
> TTC Weeks 1 and 2: From Menstruation
to Ovulation
> TTC Week 3: From
Ovulation to Conception
> TTC Week 4: Implantation
and the Luteal Phase
> Pregnancy Week 1: Pregnancy Symptoms
& Fetal Development
> Pregnancy Week 2: What
to Expect During Your First Trimester
> Pregnancy
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Ah, your first positive
pregnancy test - charted out and celebrated in Part
3... You are now officially pregnant! Continue taking your prenatal vitamin,
which you hopefully started taking while you were just trying-to-conceive as
part of a (proactive) pregnancy health and diet regimen. So what can you expect
now? Well, that depends: Beyond a missed period and a + preg test, no pregnancy
symptom will be felt exactly the same nor can any pregnancy experience be universalized.
What we'll provide is an overview of possible signs and symptoms, with the understanding
that not all symptoms will be experienced - or experienced with the same intensity
or duration.
But what's happening in
your body about now? In Part 3, the blastocyst implanted in your endometrium
and became the embryo. hCG was secreted by the placenta which told your body
to keep making progesterone. Around 10 days after ovulation, you used a pregnancy
test to discover that you were indeed pregnant.
Now, with the formation
of the placenta, we see the appearance of the yolk sac, which functions to create
embryonic blood cells until fetal organs mature sufficiently to begin producing
their own cells. Also, the umbilical cord develops to directly connect the embryo
to the placenta so nutrients and oxygen can be exchanged between the fetus and
mother-to-be. This is a phase of rapid growth for the embryo! And with this
burst of growth, a band of cells appears on the surface of the embryo that will
provide a genetic blue-print or autotelic coding for the diagrammatic arrangement
of your baby's tissues, organs, and general bio-systemic ordering. This cellular
outline is called, laconically enough, the primitive streak.
Your missed period!
If by chance you have not taken an early pregnancy test - or if
you were not formally trying to conceive - then a common first symptom
of pregnancy may be a "missed period". As indicated above, the production
of hCG let's your body know that there is a embryo in the house and that progesterone
production should continue on. Menstruation is caused by falling progesterone
levels and the breakdown of the endometrium, so if progesterone levels stay
high, then the endometrium stays healthy and the pregnancy is maintained. In
short, menstruation does not ensue and you experience your missed period.
As we indicated previously,
tender breasts and nipples are also commonly associated with
high progesterone levels. Breast sensitivity is often experienced during the
luteal phase (following ovulation) in non-pregnant women. However, a very common
early pregnancy symptom is increased nipple and breast sensitivity. So, keep
on the look out for intensified tenderness or breast/nipple sensitivity that
may last longer than associated with previous cycles. Once you become pregnant,
your body will begin preparing the breasts and breast glands for pregnancy.
Breast soreness, tenderness, and swelling will likely ensue...
So the embryo is growing
fast, practically doubling in size daily during very early pregnancy. If this
exponential rate of growth were to be maintained, your baby would soon be as
large as planet Earth itself - a rather uncomfortable thought to say the least.
One predictable and common coefficient of this rapid growth - as well as the
result of flowing hormones - is fatigue. Fatigue, even exhaustion,
may be a primary sign of pregnancy. As they say, your are eating for two now,
and nutrients/calories that would typically go to running your system are now
re-directed to fetal development. Eat healthy, eat well, and also consider taking
an Omega-3 supplement along with your prenatal vitamin. Of course, be in regular
contact with your doctor regarding the best health, diet, and exercise regimen
for you. Logically, hunger is an associated symptom. Increased hunger
and food cravings are a celebrated pregnancy symptom. Sometimes food
cravings may be unusual or even a bit bizarre as your body is seeking particular
forms of nutrients and proteins.
Feeling queasy? While on
the topic of foods, morning sickness is among the most famous
(or infamous) of all pregnancy symptoms. Some women do not experience this nausea
associated with pregnancy - about 30% of us will fall into this lucky category.
For the rest of us, high levels of hCG and progesterone may have us feeling
crummy - and not only during the early hours of the day. It's a misnomer to
say the morning sickness strikes in the morning: women can experience pregnancy
symptoms of nausea during other times of the day or night. If you are feeling
green, try a doctor-recommended Preggy Pop to wash the morning sickness blues
away.
While you are in the restroom
dealing with morning sickness issues, you may also note that you are urinating
more and more often. Frequent urination is simply caused by
the expansion of the uterus during pregnancy, which in turn exerts pressure
on the bladder causing you to pee more often. One of the less uncomfortable
pregnancy symptoms, increased frequency of urination can be a bit annoying at
a Morton Feldman symphony.
So you have a pregnancy
test, a missed period, and perhaps a few salient early pregnancy symptoms on
the horizon. Inside the uterus, Gastrulation is now taking
place - a key phase in the development of the embryo. Here, we see a migration
of cells and a topographical formation into 3 distinct cellular layers. These
layers stem from the systemic outline of the primitive streak and each will
form discrete parts and organs of the body. The endoderm layer is the template
for the lining of the lungs, certain glands, the bladder, and the digestive
tract. The mesoderm is the middle layer from whence develops the heart, muscles,
bones, lungs, and reproductive organs. The outer ectoderm is responsible for
the formation of the sensory organs - the skin, eyes, ears, nose, and mouth
- as well as the nervous system.
At this point, we also can
observe incipient development of the heart and the neural
tube. The latter is necessary for the development of the spine and
the central nervous system. Maybe you have heard that prenatal vitamins containing
folic acid can prevent birth defects? Well, neural tube birth defects are the
category in question here, and evidence does suggest that taking a supplement
containing folic acid (and/or eating foods rich in folic acid) can indeed reduce
the risk of neural tube birth defects during early pregnancy, when the neural
tube appears.
Okay, onto the following
weeks - your first trimester pregnancy signs and experiences....
Next... What
to Expect During Your First Trimester
> Pregnancy
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