The 37th week is officially classified as full term and he has
fully developed lungs and enough fat to help him regulate his body temperature.
Not exact matches
Lungs develop fully in the final weeks of pregnancy.
Infants below six months are at the risks of being attacked by this malady because their
lungs have not been
fully developed to handle the strenuous impact of the infection and they can not manage the whooping effect in their body systems.
Your baby's organs are
fully developed, and the
lungs are still perfecting themselves.
The
lungs are
developing rapidly, but your baby wouldn't be
fully able to breathe on its own until about 36 weeks.
When the labor is forced, prior to a mother going into natural labor, there is a significant risk that the
lungs have not yet been
fully developed.
Their
lungs are still
developing and are very immature, they will
fully develop towards the end of the third trimester.
Their baby's
lungs and limbs were unlikely to have
developed properly, and to make matters worse part of his brain hadn't
fully developed.
Many premature babies have trouble breathing on their own because their
lungs are not
fully developed.
At the thirty - seven - week mark, your baby's
lungs are nearly almost
fully matured, with just a short while to go until they completely finish
developing.
Make sure that your baby
lungs are
fully developed and maintain all vaccinations to reduce any infection.
During this period of nine - month pregnancy, the baby's
lungs will be
fully developed and surfactant production will be increased, which helps the baby to breath after birth.
Just as important, many of the standard exams that veterinarians rely on to direct them to the source of the problem (reflexes, heart and
lung sounds, vision, balance, pain sensation, etc.) yield less information in neonates because these systems have not yet
developed fully.
This could happen due to some external force like umbilical cord is prolapsed or the baby is underweight or the
lungs are not
fully developed.