Share the excitement!
Get our Facebook app

Create a new look every week!

Week 16: I'm not gas or nervous butterflies!

Fetal development in pregnancy week 16

~length
4.5 in | 11.4 cm
~weight
3.5 oz | 100 g

Over the past three weeks your magical-gro baby has managed to add on yet another 2 full inches of length (totaling about 4.5 inches) and now weighs a whopping 3.5 ounces!

Guess what? Your little lollipop is not so bobble-headed anymore!

Yep, your baby's head-to-body ratio is starting to even out, as the rest of their body - including their arms and legs (the better to kick you with!) plays catch-up.

One of the most anticipated moments in pregnancy is the "quickening" or the first time you undeniably feel your child move inside of you.

In some cultures a woman is not even considered pregnant until she experiences the quickening!

Women claim to feel it as early as 14 weeks. That said, other women laugh at the thought of that woman cherishing a fart that's rumbling in her small intestines.

In general, it's safe to say that after 18 - 20 weeks, all women will experience the quickening as a definitive non-fart poke or prod from within their womb.

Those sweet little flutters will evolve into pokes, prods, and even outright painful kicking as your break-dancing baby-cakes grow in size and seek ways to straighten out in their increasingly cramped quarters.

If you had that gender ultrasound right now, which most doctors recommend at about this time, you might see your little one sucking their thumb, not to mention the necessary signifiers to let you know whether you've got a wee lad or lassie.

Awww...

Share your baby's development on Facebook!

Only 24 more weeks to go
My baby is now big enough for an ultrasound to detect whether I've got a wee lad or lassie. My 4.5 inch light-bulb baby is no longer quite so top-heavy either as their little limbs have lengthened & are ...
Tuesday at 19:16 via Baby Gaga · Comment · Like

Andrea

Week 16 Calendar Girl

February 2012

Enter my photo!


And how's mom doing?

Okay, grab a seat, take a deep breath and focus. It's time for the serious-medical-issues discussion.Big Picture: The MMT helps 10% of women start to deal with the scary reality that something isn't normal about their pregnancy, while causing a crap-ton of undue stress for 90% of women.

Ultrasounds are a common low-risk procedure that's typically performed multiple times throughout your pregnancy.

Using a sonogram, a trained ultrasound technician measures and monitors your baby's growth and is able to detect physical defects and issues.

If everything is developing fine from the ultrasound, most medical practitioners automatically recommend the Multiple Marker Test (MMT aka Triple Screen Test).

This very common procedure checks your blood (not your baby's) for specific protein and hormone levels and any potential genetic issues. Before you start breathing in that strained fearful way or furrowing your brow in concern, you should know that even if you do get a positive test this hardly means your little trooper is in trouble.

In reality, only about 3 to 5 percent of women yield positive results, and of those women, only 10 percent actually have any sort of complication to report.

In other words, 90% of the women who get positive results from the MMT are getting false positives.

Big Picture: The MMT helps 10% of women start to deal with the scary reality that something isn't normal about their pregnancy, while causing a crap-ton of undue stress for 90% of the women.

Obviously, a positive test from the MMT will have the doctor recommending further testing, including the much-scarier very-invasive amniocentesis (sticking a massive needle into your womb) and more ultrasounds.

Remember: this is your pregnancy. You make the choices here. If you don't want to go through the undue stress of taking this test, you can opt out. That's your right.

Still, you should weigh the risks carefully. The blood test does identify neural tube defects and Down Syndrome when it's not being wrong (which it almost always is).

For women over the age of 35, doctors will highly recommend this test, as Down Syndrome is more common in babies born to women over the age of 35, and 10% more common in women over the age of 40.

To sum it up: the MMT is a simple blood test that has 90% false positives, which causes serious-but-undue stress in millions of young women, while it also informs a minority of women about the status of unexpected and serious issues.

Your pregnancy, your choice.

« Week 15
Week 17 »
Get your own free personalized weekly newsletter subscribe now!

Pregnancy Discussions

Bittersweetmama69 postedDue in July anyone else?2 days ago
jcm098 postedJuly 3 due date first baby2 days ago
specialmommy12 postedjuly 4th baby3 days ago
Hayley Murfet posted:) July :)4th Feb
Stacey M. postedNew to site and due July 7th!!31st Jan
I ♥ Jade + .5 [WAL] postedTests not getting darker?37 min ago
UnknownGirl postedSex of your babies.3 hrs ago
LittlePieceOfHeaven postedHow long was your baby in NB?1 hour ago
milo456 postedIs it ok to...1 hour ago
Tricey Bee postedLabetalol at 36 weeks58 min ago

A change in vision is just another loopy symptom many pregnant women experience. This is due to hormonal changes and fluid retention that cause your corneas to thicken slightly. Most women’s vision usually returns to normal after giving birth, so it’s unlikely that you’ll have to change your prescription or get glasses if you didn’t wear them before pregnancy, but if you’re unsure you can always have it checked.

Flip a coin, hope for heads, get tails, cry.
by The Sarcastic Journalist

When I was pregnant with my daughter, I decided to ask everyone in our family whether they thought I was having a boy or girl. I thought it might be fun to write down in her baby book that everyone related to us hoped she’d be a boy!

Ha!

There were some family members that made it well-known that they wanted a certain gender. Girl. Boy. Twins! (Yes, for some reason, there were people that were sure I was having twins at 16 weeks.)

Then there were the people that couldn’t decide. They’d stand there, much like an annoying person at a fast-food restaurant that can’t make up his mind (It is a hamburger! Get the freaking hamburger!) going back and forth, back and forth.

Come on, buddy. Boy or girl, you have a fifty/fifty chance of getting it right.

If someone, by chance, decided to ask me my preference, they made a big deal when I told them I hoped to have a girl.

“What if you have a boy,” they’d ask. I’m not sure what they expected me to say. I’d give the baby back? Refuse to go into labor?

Figuring I’d give them what they came for, I’d fire off my snarky comeback: “I’d cry.”

For some reason, nobody ever liked that answer.

Recommended reading for week 16

rating 4.50/5

good reading for: Expectent parents seeking detailed information about the development and physiology of their child's brain and body. An excellent resource on lots of fascinating facts-- definitely not a casual read though. >> read reviews

complete list of recommended books
RegisterLoginSearchMembers MapWhos OnlineAdvanced Search
Pregnancy Weeks 1 - 40 Due Date Calculator Top 40 Books Cartoons Pregnancy Models Sarcastic Journalist Forums Resources & Links Pregnancy Issues Due Date Buddies Teen Pregnancy Baby Names TTC & Adoption Suffering & Loss Abortion Survivors Preparing for Baby Labor & Birth Tickers Pregnancy Tickers
Forums Resources & Links Post Partum Issues Parents with Preemies Parents with Infants Parents with Toddlers Parents with Kids Single Parenting Teen Parenting Special Needs Tickers Birthday Tickers
Forums Free for All Photo Spot Debate & Discuss Health & Well-Being Sex & Relationships All Things Food Contests Creation Station Weight Loss & Fitness Shopping & Classifieds Faqs & Feedback The Drama Corner

About | Site Map | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Advertise

All contents copyright © baby-gaga.com 2003-2011. All Rights Reserved.