Pregnancy glossary F - False labor to Fundus
- False labor
- Fertility awareness
- Fertilisation
- Fetal alcohol syndrome
- Fetal_distress
- Fetus
- Follicle
- Fontanelle
- Forceps
- Fraternal twin
- Fundus
False labor
The difference between false labour and real labour? After a point, false labour does not progress and then eventually stops
Fertility awareness
Fertility awareness can help you become more familiar with your own body, and help enhance feelings of control over your health care related to the conception and gestation of your baby.
Fertilisation
Penetration of the egg by the sperm and the beginning of life for your baby.
Fetal alcohol syndrome
Also known as FAS, this a disorder is characterised by growth retardation, facial abnormalities, and central nervous system dysfunction (CNS). FAS is caused by a woman's use of alcohol during pregnancy.
Fetal distress
Warning signs indicating fetal hypoxia (deficiency in amount of oxygen reaching fetal tissues).
Fetus
The name given to the unborn baby from the eighth week after conception to the moment of birth.
Follicle
This fluid-filled sac in the ovary sustains the developing egg. It's from here that the egg is released during ovulation. Each month, the follicle is stimulated to release the ovum by a hormone called FSH (Follicle Stimulating Hormone), which is made by the pituitary gland.
Fontanelle
The two 'soft spots' between the cranial plates on a baby's head. They are gaps in the skull where bones have not yet fused. As your baby grows, these gaps close over.
Forceps
Large tongs which are occasionally used to help assist the delivery of a baby.
Fraternal twin
Fraternal twins/triplets are created when two or more separate eggs released during the same ovulation cycle are fertilised by two separate sperm. The babies will not be any more identical than normal siblings, and boy/girl combinations are possible. This type of twinning is more likely to occur where there is a maternal family history of fraternal multiples.
Fundus
The top of the uterus. At 12 weeks of pregnancy, the fundus is at the top of the pubic bone (symphysis pubis). At approximately 20 weeks, the fundus has reached your belly button (umbilicus). After the 20th week, fundal height (measured from above the pubic bone) is equal to the number of weeks of gestation. (For example, at 25 weeks, the fundus will be about 25cm above the pubic bone.)
Find more:
- Birth Terms
- Labour Terms
- Pregnancy glossary index
This article was written by Claire Halliday for Kidspot New Zealand
