Not at all. Your doctor may advise you to refrain for a week or so before your due date, but generally, any activity that was common before you became pregnant is perfectly acceptable after you become pregnant with the caveat, if it hurts, don't do it.
Sperm is neither good or bad for unborn baby. It does not come in contact with unborn baby in any way.
No.
No, you cannot pass Antiphospholipid syndrome to a surrogate mother who is carrying your baby. You can pass it onto your unborn baby though.
Drugs in the mother's bloodstream pass across the membrane of the placenta, and transfer to the unborn baby's blood by the umbilical cord, which connects the baby to the placenta.
Genes pass the traits of the parents to the offspring.
When the sperm and egg meet they each have a 23 chromosomes and each chromosome has different genes and when it is time the most dominant gene will prevail and that is what will show in the offspring. Babies are made up from the parent's gene.
They pass on some of their genes to their offspring.
Well i have MRSA on my skin and i got pregnant and they said it would not hurt the baby so i can only tell you that ,i am not sure about respiratory MRSA.
Can genetic counselors tell couples the exact genes that they will pass on to their offspring?Read more: Can_genetic_counselors_tell_couples_the_exact_genes_that_they_will_pass_on_to_their_offspring
Because our overys work about when we are 10 years of age and it has no sperm to help a baby grow so we do not have the sperm to help so we lose the egg and blood builds up and lets the blood pass!
C
Fetal tachycardia (fetal = baby in last 2 trimesters ++ tachy = fast + cardi = heart) is a sustained heartbeat of over 160 beats per minute in an unborn baby in the last two trimesters of the pregnancy. The heart is not filling properly, and this can cause problems. The most common treatment is to give the mother the drug digoxin. The drug will pass through the placental membrane and be delivered directly to the baby via the mother.
The bird on the right is more likely to pass on its genes because it has a longer beak so it can get more food and eat more making it more likely to pass on its genes.
No.