D
David_Paul
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By Amy Norton
Fri Sep 9,2005
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An infant’s first cry may occur not in the delivery room, but in the womb, researchers have found.
With the help of video-recorded ultrasound images, the investigators found that a group of third-trimester fetuses showed evidence of “crying behavior” in response to a low-decibel noise played on the mother’s abdomen.
Fetuses showed a “startle” response to the noise, along with deep inhalations and exhalations, an open mouth and a “quivering” chin – all signs of crying.
The behavior, seen in 11 fetuses, began as early as the 28th week of pregnancy.
It was only by chance that the researchers made their observations, said study co-author Dr. Ed Mitchell of the University in Auckland in New Zealand.
The ultrasounds and noise stimulation were performed as part of research looking into the effects of maternal smoking and cocaine use during pregnancy. At first, the researchers thought the fetal responses they saw might be seizures, Mitchell told Reuters Health.
But when they took a closer look at the video recordings, they realized the fetuses’ behavior was analogous to an infant’s crying.
It’s not surprising that fetuses this age would show such behavior, Mitchell said, since premature infants born even earlier than the 28th week of pregnancy can cry.
“But it had never been observed or recognized for what it is,” he said of the fetal crying.
Mitchell and his colleagues report their findings in the Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition . . .continued here
Fri Sep 9,2005
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - An infant’s first cry may occur not in the delivery room, but in the womb, researchers have found.
With the help of video-recorded ultrasound images, the investigators found that a group of third-trimester fetuses showed evidence of “crying behavior” in response to a low-decibel noise played on the mother’s abdomen.
Fetuses showed a “startle” response to the noise, along with deep inhalations and exhalations, an open mouth and a “quivering” chin – all signs of crying.
The behavior, seen in 11 fetuses, began as early as the 28th week of pregnancy.
It was only by chance that the researchers made their observations, said study co-author Dr. Ed Mitchell of the University in Auckland in New Zealand.
The ultrasounds and noise stimulation were performed as part of research looking into the effects of maternal smoking and cocaine use during pregnancy. At first, the researchers thought the fetal responses they saw might be seizures, Mitchell told Reuters Health.
But when they took a closer look at the video recordings, they realized the fetuses’ behavior was analogous to an infant’s crying.
It’s not surprising that fetuses this age would show such behavior, Mitchell said, since premature infants born even earlier than the 28th week of pregnancy can cry.
“But it had never been observed or recognized for what it is,” he said of the fetal crying.
Mitchell and his colleagues report their findings in the Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition . . .continued here