FamilySource (TM) This is our cache of http://pregnancy-calendar.adoption.com/first-trimester/week-10.html.
our cache is the snapshot that we took of the page as we crawled the web.
The page may have changed since that time. Click here for the current page without highlighting.
 
We are neither affiliated with the authors of this page nor responsible for its content.
Pregnancy Week 10, First Trimester. Pregnancy Calendar by Week
  
Adoption Network Law Center Adoption Network Law Center
Located in California?
We can help you
adopt HERE!
Adoption Network Law Center
Unplanned Pregnancy
in California?
Click here for
more INFO!
Adoption Network Law Center
you are here: adoption.com > pregnant > pregnancy calendar > first trimester: week 10

pregnancy week 10


Week 10


What happens to you?

You are still tired and probably nauseated.  Your abdomen may begin to pooch out, but it will be more from bowel distension than from an enlarged uterus.  Your waistline is slowly disappearing.

You may be urinating more frequently.  Your uterus hasn't gotten big enough to press on your bladder yet, but you may find yourself going to the bathroom much more often.  This is just another symptom of the increased hormones in your body and can be one of the first symptoms you notice.  Frequent urination will last through your whole pregnancy, with a marked increase during your last month or two when the baby will probably be pressing on your bladder most of the time.  If you should have any burning or pain during urination, contact your doctor or midwife immediately.  You could have a bladder infection and will need to take a prescription medication to clear it up.

What happens to the baby?

The baby is now called a fetus.  The average length is approximately 27-35 mm or 1.06-1.38 inches, and the weight is four grams, or about the weight of four paper clips.  Tiny toes have formed now.  The eyes are largely open, but soon the eyelids will fuse and stay that way until 25-27 weeks.  External genitals are beginning to differentiate.  External ears and the upper lip are completely formed.


  1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11  12  13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22  23  24  25  26  27  28  29  30  31  32  33  34  35  36  37  38  39  40  41  42
Where do I start?

popular
first questions
parent profiles
select agency / attorney
maternity homes
topics
pregnant forums
resources
Adoption Profiles
226 hopeful adoptive parents
SPONSOR
AdoptHelp
Want to Adopt?
AdoptHelp
AdoptHelp
Pregnant?
click here
AdoptHelp



© Adoption Media, LLC 1995-2005. This site should not substitute personal professional, legal or medical advice. The accuracy and personal applicability of this information is not guaranteed. By using it you agree to the terms of service, including jurisdiction and limitation of liability provisions.

JRun Server Name: nutch2 pageload time: 62ms