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PROBLEMS IN PRENATAL DEVELOPMENT
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Good Morning! 3/12/14 Today’s Agenda: Problems during prenatal development Review Prenatal development Turn in entry about pregnancy Friday: Quiz on prenatal development
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Losing a baby Sometimes a baby doesn’t develop normally, sometimes causing the baby to die If the baby dies before 20 weeks, it’s a miscarriage After 20 weeks, it’s called a stillbirth
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Grief Loss of baby can be very painful Couples who lose an unborn baby, grieve just as they would for a child who had been born They go through the same stages of grief Most are able to successfully have children later
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Birth Defects Born with serious problems that threaten their health or ability to live There are hundreds of different ones Vary widely – some are mild and can be corrected easily Some are severe, lifelong disabilities Some cause death 3 out of every 100 children in the US are born with a birth defect Not always apparent at birth – show up months or years later
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What are they? Some could affect the shape or size of the body or certain parts of the body Child could be born with a misshapen foot, a missing finger, or an extra finger Some could effect their body functions Blindness, deafness, mental retardedness
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What causes them? 60% of the time, we don’t know what caused it Constant research is done to decrease the number 4 main causes: Environmental Hereditary Errors in Chromosomes Interaction of Heredity and Environment
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Environmental causes Baby develops all the bodily systems during the first few weeks of pregnancy Depends completely on the mother for nourishment Choices the Mom makes can effect the baby Nutritional diet of mother Diseases or infections the mother has Harmful substances Some medicines Exposure to hazards (radiation)
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Hereditary Genetic blueprint has thousands of genes Each person has 5 or 6 recessive genes that are imperfect but have no effect on development But, if each parent passes on the same imperfect gene or it’s a dominant gene, it may cause a birth defect Some only effect one gender – hemophilia and color blindness only affect males
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Errors in Chromosomes Could be too many or too few chromosomes in each of the baby’s cells Most common of this type is down’s syndrome 1 in every 800 births has this condition Risk increases when mother is 35 or older Has an extra chromosome 21 Hundreds of genes in chromosomes, so it can interfere with development in many ways
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Interaction of Heredity and Environment A baby may inherit the tendency for a heart defect, but it only shows up if other factors affect the baby during pregnancy Drugs and alcohol Certain viruses These cases, if only one thing happened (heredity OR environment) the heart would likely be normal
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Prevention and Diagnosis Some can be prevented Healthy diet choices Taking vitamins – particularly Folic Acid Right amount could prevent 1000 cases of spina bifida per year No harmful substances
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Genetic Counseling Parents already have a child with a birth defect High risk group – over 35, have hereditary risks Over 100 birth defects can be diagnosed before birth-possibly treated and prevented Different tests
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Prenatal diagnosis Ultrasound – sound waves to make a video image of an unborn baby. Can show certain defects with skeleton or organs. Amniocentesis – withdraw a sample of the amniotic fluid and testing for indications of certain problems Contains some cells from the fetus Determine Downs syndrome Chorionic villi sampling – small amounts of tissue from the membrane around fetus. Can be done earlier than amniocentesis
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Complete: Birth defects affect…
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