I am assuming you do not know how a placenta looks like. It's not just a thin cord. It's pretty large, not something you can easily forget to "remove". I can't imagine a doctor forgetting to remove that. And if the doctor does forget, the patient will lose a lot of blood, and then would probably die.
yes
The placenta is an organ that is inside the uterus in the female body. The uterus maintains the fetus through the umbilical cord. Some parents choose to eat the placenta after birth.
The material that leaves the body right after the delivery; it is the placenta and other such structures that served to carry the baby through the pregnancy.After birth is discharge of the placenta and fetal membranes from the uterus after the birth of offspring.
They make up the placenta that provides the blastocyst with nutrients.
Like humans, dogs have an after birth. After birth is the birth of the placenta. The placenta is what surronds the baby or in this case puppys during birth and protects them. It kind of looks like a mushy liver. If its not this then take your dog to the vet to be sure. =] Have fun with your puppies!
No. The umbilical cord is attached to the placenta, which is the sack that the baby grows in. After giving birth, the placenta and the umbilical cord leave the body through the vagina.
your whole body will get cut in half
Mammals, such as kittens, have a cord that connects them to the placenta. The placenta transfers food and oxygen to the baby while it is growing. That cord, the umbilical cord, goes from the placenta to the navel (or, on a cat, where the navel would be). Sometimes that cord can get wrapped around part of the body during birth.
by placenta
the placenta is called an afterbirth after the baby is born
Placenta
The unborn baby's body forms her first stool, called meconium, in the large intestine, which usually isn't passed until after birth. Some babies push out meconium before birth. If your baby does have a bowel movement before or during delivery, your health care provider will monitor her responses carefully to ensure that she doesn't develop any complications as a result.
Gestational diabetes affects the mother only after the baby's body has been formed. So no birth defects, but babies may develop low blood glucose and breathing difficulty.The placenta supports the baby as it grows. Hormones from the placenta help the baby develop. But these hormones also block the action of the mother's insulin in her body. This problem is called insulin resistance. Insulin resistance makes it hard for the mother's body to use insulin. She may need up to three times as much insulin.