If your baby has a bowel movement before she is born, she may be covered in meconium, a greenish -
black tarry substance.
Not exact matches
The
black,
tarry stool, called meconium, contains bilirubin, the
substance that causes newborn jaundice.
Usually in the first couple of days of life, a newborn baby will pass a dark green or
black,
tarry substance called meconium.
Babies are born with their intestines filled with a greenish -
black,
tarry substance called meconium.
Your baby's first bowel movements are a
black,
tarry, sticky
substance called meconium.
Blood that leaks from an ulcer passes through the gut along with food and is digested into a
black,
tarry substance.
Blood from an ulcer passes through the gut along with food and is digested into a
black,
tarry substance.