Pregnancy Doctor Answers Pregnancy Questions
Shilpi Mehta-Lee is Site Director, Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine, NYU Langone Hospital—Brooklyn.
Director: Anna O'Donohue
Director of Photography: Charlie Jordan
Editor: Richard Trammell
Expert: Dr. Shilpi Mehta-Lee
Line Producer: Joseph Buscemi
Associate Producer: Jasmine Breinburg; Paul Gulyas; Brandon White
Production Manager: Peter Brunette
Casting Producer: Nicole Ford
Camera Operator: Christopher Eustache
Sound Mixer: Sean Paulsen
Production Assistant: Ryan Coppola
Post Production Supervisor: Christian Olguin
Post Production Coordinator: Ian Bryant
Supervising Editor: Doug Larsen
Additional Editor: Paul Tael
Assistant Editor: Justin Symonds
Released on 01/21/2025
I'm Shilpi Mehta-Lee and I'm a high-risk pregnancy doctor.
I'm here today to answer your questions from the internet.
This is Pregnancy Support.
[upbeat music]
@kingeniola asks, Apparently I can up my chances
of having twins if I eat loads of yams.
Please confirm.
It turns out, probably not.
Where this comes from is the Yuruba people of Nigeria
have a specific yam
that has a lot of estrogen-like chemicals in it,
and that area of the world
has a really high incidence of twinning
and it's thought that perhaps this particular white yam
caused twinning to be increased in that patient population.
Whether you eat yams from your local grocery store
and that causes twinning is yet to be determined.
At @alybarrington asked,
Did you know they had pregnancy tests
in ancient Egyptian society?
This stuff is so damn cool.
Yes, in fact, they did have pregnancy tests
in ancient Egyptian society.
Women would urinate on these two bags of grain,
barley and wheat, that were responsive to estrogen,
and if those grains sprouted,
it meant that the mother was pregnant.
It's thought to have been about 70
to 80% accurate at detecting pregnancy,
which is really quite amazing.
Now we have a filtration type of lab
that you can do literally at home.
You pee on a stick.
The beta HCG, the human chorionic gonadotropin
that is formulated
when the embryo is forming in your uterus,
is excreted really early on,
so probably not the first two
to three days after you conceive,
but pretty much right after that.
And when you have high levels of HCG,
as it's filtering through that stick,
if there's a positive result,
you'll see two lines
because the HCG will bind to one of the lines.
If it's a negative result, you'll only see one line
because it's just the control.
@kaecinema asks, How the hell does an ultrasound work?
It's like a hack where they see right through you.
It kind of is a hack where we do see right through you.
This all started in the time of World War I
and World War II where you were using sound waves
through water to detect a submarine.
They recognized that there was a medical application to this
where you could use sound waves
to hit the fetal skin and walls
and really create an image on a computer screen.
This is a two-dimensional image.
The probe is coming through the maternal skin
from about here
and reflecting sound waves through the amniotic fluid
back onto the probe in order to create a computer-generated,
two-dimensional image.
More recently, there's been a development
of three-dimensional fetal imaging
that still uses that same sound wave technology
to create a three-dimensional image of your fetus.
Now on these 3D images,
you can see more lifelike fetal images,
but we don't use them so much
in diagnosing medical problems.
We really still rely very heavily
on those two-dimensional images to diagnose fetal issues.
@toedavb asks, Is it okay to exercise during pregnancy?
Regular and routine exercise in pregnancy
is completely safe.
The fetus is in a pool of amniotic fluid.
It's always moving.
It's in a constant state of sort of anti-gravity,
so we don't really think
that it feels the jostling of movement up and down
when you go for a 5K run
or any sort of run.
@Simply-Tootsiie ask, Why TF when you pregnant,
everything smells so effing weird?
All of my patients say, I can smell so much more.
It smells different. It smells funny.
There is an evolutionary theory about this.
It may help you to prevent eating something that's toxic
to either yourself or the pregnancy during that time.
@athonymw asks, What is vanishing twin syndrome
and what are the causes?
This is a uterus and there is a fetus here,
and this is one gestational sac
and then there's a second empty gestational sac.
And what that means
is this pregnancy most likely formed two embryos,
but only one made it to the stage
where you can see a small embryo and a heartbeat,
and that's called a vanishing twin.
That twin vanished.
The other twin will go on to form a totally normal embryo.
A vanishing twin in the first trimester
is not considered to be a dangerous outcome
that causes an adverse pregnancy outcome.
A lot of times when a twin gestation form,
20 or 30% of the time,
there's a vanishing twin.
It's thought to be the main driver of this test
that we now do on most pregnant women
called non-invasive prenatal testing being falsely positive.
Every once in a while,
when we do that test and we sequence that DNA,
there's an extra chromosome 21, 13, or 18,
or a change in the sex chromosome material.
That's thought to be because in vanishing twin syndrome,
the DNA may still be floating around
in the maternal bloodstream
and cause a false-positive result
if that vanished twin was actually abnormal.
@BlueNeptune asks,
Do you think babies can taste in the womb?
Like damn, that [beep] is eating spaghetti again?
Actually, flavor molecules can pass
from the maternal bloodstream through the placenta
and into the amniotic cavity.
It's possible that there are flavor molecules passing
into the fetal mouth and through the nose
so that they can smell and taste what the mom eats.
Infants do gravitate towards similar food choices
as their moms do,
so it's possible that that flavor conditioning
and flavor imprinting happens in utero
rather than just after they're born.
@mesopissed asks, How the [beep] am I supposed to know
if I'm going into labor
when I've never been in labor before?
This is a tough question because it's true.
The vast majority of first time moms don't really know
what labor feels like.
There's one really great rule of thumb
in explaining how a patient can know that they're in labor.
We use the 5-1-1 rule.
That's where a patient feels cramping and contractions
and pain in their abdomen
and in through their pelvis every five minutes.
And that pain lasts approximately one minute
and it lasts for over an hour.
And if it's happening
and you have an hour of contractions,
you might wanna head to the hospital
or at least call your doctor.
@minetiract asks, Wait, do babies cry in the womb?
The amniotic fluid that is in the mother's uterus
makes it so that babies can't make really any sound,
but there are some studies to show
that perhaps at 28 weeks,
babies can start doing practice grimacing in the womb.
When we are performing ultrasound,
we actually look for different kinds of practice movements.
So we're looking for practice breathing,
which is where the diaphragm goes up and down,
and you might be able to see fluid coming in
and out of the nostrils,
but we don't usually look for practice crying.
@Vhusie_N says, Cryptic pregnancy will always shock me
'cause what do you mean you had cramps
and the next thing you were giving birth?
A cryptic pregnancy is where you don't know you're pregnant
until the end of the pregnancy or the third trimester.
Cryptic pregnancy probably happens about one in 500 times.
We think that it most likely happens
for one of two sets of reasons.
One, there was some irregularity in your periods,
or you were breastfeeding so that you didn't get periods,
or you had bleeding in the early part of your pregnancy,
so you didn't know you were missing a period.
And the other part of cryptic pregnancy
probably has to do with mental health,
patients who didn't recognize they were pregnant
due to mental health condition.
@allicatto asks, Are you telling me that the easiest way
to avoid cleaning cat litter is to be pregnant?
We really do advise women
not to change cat litter in pregnancy.
That's because some cats carry a parasite
called toxoplasmosis
and it can cause birth defects.
Toxoplasmosis isn't only found in the cat litter.
It can be found in the ground and in undercooked foods.
In other countries, like in Europe, specifically France,
there can be a higher level of exposure to toxoplasmosis
because of undercooked meats and cheeses
and things that may expose patients to parasites.
They actually test for it.
In the United States, it's less ubiquitous
and we don't find that there's a need to test for it.
@finstanSG says,
At how many weeks do you think a fetus becomes viable?
The early third trimester, probably at about 24 weeks.
That's when a fetus can survive outside of the uterus.
That may change with advances in neonatology
and in technologies that can help earlier
and earlier fetuses survive.
@Kofi99 asks, Babies can poo inside the womb?
Yes, babies can poo inside the womb.
We call it meconium.
Meconium is really a natural byproduct
of swallowing the skin cells
and the hair cells in the amniotic fluid
all the way through the first, second,
and third trimesters of pregnancy.
This happens about 13% of the time,
and we can see that greenish tinge
to the amniotic fluid at birth.
It can be important in the neonatal period
because an increase in meconium
can sometimes make it more difficult
for babies to breathe once they're born.
@trash_netflix says, How does Plan B work?
It basically delays ovulation for about 72 hours.
In a normal pregnancy, we wanna ovulate from our ovary
and that egg comes into the tube
and that's where it meets the sperm either in the tube
or in the uterus.
What Plan B does is it basically prevents ovulation
so that there is no egg to meet the sperm during this time,
which means you can't conceive
during the most important 72 hours after sex.
@JanelleAngelie asks, Why does no one talk about
how terrible the first trimester is?
In the first trimester of pregnancy,
a lot of things are happening.
Your body is changing so much.
You're getting all that progesterone,
all that estrogen into your bloodstream.
The embryo is growing from a really small size.
The vast majority of the fetal organs are forming.
Up to about 12 weeks of pregnancy,
you're seeing bone and skin and heart structures,
and so organogenesis, that early part of the pregnancy,
is super, super important
and it probably does make you feel a little terrible.
@Kensetsu6 asks, What happens in the second trimester?
There's continued formation of the organs
through the second trimester.
That's when neurodevelopment begins,
when the brain starts developing.
There's also development of teeth and other organs.
This is probably about a late second-trimester fetus.
It's no longer the size of a small embryo.
It's really growing up to about the mother's belly button
or beyond.
Also, in the second trimester,
people start to feel a little bit better
about the pregnancy.
They're not feeling that surge of hormones.
They've sort of acclimated to that surge.
It's kind of called the golden trimester
because people feel less nauseated,
they have more energy, and they're less fatigued.
@KBrenishiaa says, Last trimester of pregnancy, 0/10.
Do not recommend.
The third trimester of pregnancy,
somewhere around 25 to 28 weeks,
going all the way to when you deliver,
can be really difficult.
The fetus is growing about a half a pound a week.
Your uterus is coming up to your diaphragm.
The uterus is pretty large like the size of a watermelon.
The uterine walls are really thinned out.
You're feeling heavier.
You're feeling more tired.
This is when all your organs are being sort of pushed
in different directions.
You might notice a difference in how you walk and move
because there's a change in the curvature of your spine.
There is a lot of fetal development happening
in the third trimester.
There's vision developing.
There's taste buds developing.
Most importantly,
at the very tail end of the third trimester,
you're gonna get fetal lung maturity.
After the baby's born,
they have to be able to take that first breath
and use those lungs.
So the third trimester is really, really important
for that time.
@breedp_ says, Why do so many people get pregnant
with quadruplets?
Eh, I don't really think it's true,
but there is a lot of media attention
on higher order multiples,
multiples that are more than twins,
and that's usually more common
using assisted reproductive technology.
Current technologies really try to avoid
more than two fetuses in the uterus.
When you use in vitro fertilization or IVF,
you might get pregnant with one, maybe two fetuses.
But if you use different types
of assisted reproductive technology
that make your ovaries excrete more eggs,
you might get pregnant with triplets or quadruplets.
And we really, really, really try to avoid that
because it's not that safe
for either the fetuses or the mother.
Before IVF, the most common reason
was kind of an error in ovulation.
You released two eggs at the time you conceived
and you created twins,
so it was more common in older patients,
in patients nearing menopause to have twins.
@Mongieeeeee asks,
The mortality rate with Black women during pregnancy
and delivery is way higher than any other race.
That's true.
Black women have higher risks
of maternal morbidity and mortality in pregnancy
as compared to their white and Hispanic counterparts.
We're still working on why that is and what the reasons are.
One is possibly just structural racism
within the health community
and the ways we learn about health and healthcare.
Other things include this idea of weathering,
where if you face racism every day,
you actually may have worse health outcomes.
@KashMadonna asks, Do the second pregnancy
make you show faster or something?
There is some plausibility to this.
When you're pregnant the first time,
your muscles haven't spread.
There hasn't been that diastasis of the muscles
in the front of the abdomen yet,
but in the second pregnancy,
all of that musculature
is already sort of stretched and moved,
and so that growing uterus shows more quickly
because there isn't as much of a force downward
as there would be in the first pregnancy.
@neo_manceo asks, Guys, is there a difference
between termination of pregnancy and abortion?
Yes, there is a slight difference
between termination of pregnancy and abortion.
Abortion can be either spontaneous, which means you miscarry
or it can be a termination of pregnancy,
where you elect to terminate because there's an abnormality
or for any number of family reasons.
@Daileeeeeen asks, As I keep getting further along
in this pregnancy,
all I want is junk food.
That is so off brand for me. I'm a healthy girl.
In the beginning of pregnancy,
a lot of women do just eat crackers
because they're feeling so nauseated.
During that early part of pregnancy,
fetuses are very parasitic.
They're gonna take all the nutrients they need
from the female body
and they're gonna use it
to create this embryo and this fetus.
What's really, really, really important in pregnancy
is to eat a healthy and well-balanced nutritious diet.
Nutrient-dense foods, so whole grains,
green leafy vegetables,
things that have protein, Omega-3 fatty acids,
anything that has vitamins.
As a mom, you're expanding your blood volume,
but also the fetus is actually making
its own new blood cells.
It needs the components to do so, right, and so do you.
You need iron, you need B12, you need folic acid.
@rufusjbacon asks, What is a pregnancy glow?
I, for one, have never seen a pregnant person glow.
There is sort of a pregnancy glow.
It's one of just those biological things that's happening
as you're getting pregnant and being pregnant.
Your skin might get a little oilier.
Your face might get a little rounder
as you increase the fat content of your subcutaneous tissue.
You also notice many times stronger nails,
thicker hair, fuller hair
because you're not losing hair as much during pregnancy.
@Tharealrambo951 asks,
What happens to the baby if you smoke while pregnant?
Babies can be smaller than they would be expected to be.
That's called small for gestational age.
Babies that don't weigh quite as much
as they should at birth.
They're also a host of other adverse outcomes
that we think are associated
with tobacco smoking during pregnancy.
Increased risk of abruption,
that's where the placenta separates from the uterine wall
before it's time to deliver
and can cause significant bleeding behind the placenta
and even fetal loss.
So it's really important to consider quitting smoking
during pregnancy.
@jacob sctj asks, Like have you seen what happens
to your stomach on the inside as a baby grows?
Where do your organs shift and move?
In the very beginning of pregnancy,
your uterus is really, really small.
It's just sort of sitting in the lower pelvis.
It's only about the size of a lemon.
But as the uterus grows,
it's growing up to your belly button or even higher.
There are a lot of effects on all of your organs.
Most of the early effects are from progesterone.
So progesterone is a hormone
that's secreted by the placenta
into the maternal bloodstream.
It sort of lax in all of the cartilage
and those ligaments that are all over your body,
and it makes things looser.
It makes us able to adapt.
Your intestines, which are really just flexible
and no problem really,
they can just move aside and push to the sides.
But over time, in the third trimester, really late,
you might see that the pregnancy is really coming up
into your diaphragm.
You might even feel a little short of breath
as the liver and the lungs are pushed upward.
It's not an instant quick change
back to its normal shape and size
at the end of the pregnancy.
Women leave the hospital really feeling
like they still look pregnant.
The uterus looks about 20 weeks pregnant,
and as it shrinks down,
all those organs shift and go down.
@MamaMoxieB asks, I really need answers
as to WTF preeclampsia is definitively.
Preeclampsia is where you have an abnormal rise
in your blood pressure at the end of pregnancy.
And most likely it's happening
because you are having all of these cytokines
and inflammatory markers increasing disproportionately
at the end of pregnancy, causing your body to react,
almost like it's an autoimmune response.
Preeclampsia is basically caused by endothelial damage,
damage to the vascular system,
and you can see signs of preeclampsia
with platelets dropping with your liver enzymes going up.
People can develop headaches.
People ask if preeclampsia is on the rise,
and it turns out that probably preeclampsia
is somewhat on the rise.
There's just more recognition
of hypertensive disorders of pregnancy.
Patients getting pregnant later in life
or using assisted reproductive technology to get pregnant.
There's also more obesity, which we think is a risk factor
for developing preeclampsia.
There's ongoing research to sort of describe
how and why preeclampsia happens in certain patients
and not in others.
@lsnxxxx ask, Okay, but like is pregnancy brain real?
Because during my pregnancy, I swear I felt illiterate.
There is like 15 to 40 times
more progesterone floating around in your body
and it does change your brain and the way you think.
And by the time the woman delivers,
they're these huge surges in oxytocin,
which can really change the way you're thinking
because oxytocin is a pleasure hormone.
It's really, really possible
that as we focus more on our pregnancy,
some of the other extraneous stuff
that we used to have at top of mind, no longer is.
Now, what's more important
is what's we're carrying in the uterus,
and so there are pregnancy changes.
@delltrick asks, Why do babies in the womb kick
when they hear certain music?
Surely they can't have that much experience
being not born yet.
Later in pregnancy, probably around 28 weeks,
the fetal auditory system really starts forming
so they can start to hear.
They can hear music, maternal organ movement.
And there are some studies to suggest
that auditory stimuli can make your baby move
or kick in a different way,
and that there may be some recognition
of even the maternal voice
or the paternal voice after birth.
@alivo22_vo asks,
Why do you think it's important
for women to take prenatal vitamins when pregnant?
Every pregnancy really should have a prenatal vitamin.
We recommend them not just during pregnancy,
but in the three months before you conceive.
You need to be storing all these vitamins early
in order to form the best and the healthiest fetus
and to keep yourself healthy.
If you don't have enough folic acid in your bloodstream,
you're at higher risk
for developing neural tube complications,
complications with your brain and the spine of the fetus.
@Sirilloh ask, Us being pregnant an excuse to eat more
or do pregnant women really need to eat for two?
You don't need to eat for two during pregnancy.
What we really want is to see maybe a slight increase
in caloric intake,
but not that much.
The fetus is gonna develop
and grow as it normally would
if you just eat your normal healthy diet.
@dondang_syg asks, 3 months pregnant
and I don't see any baby bump yet.
Is that normal?
It's pretty common not to see a bump
because the pregnancy is really only to about this level
in your pelvis.
Some women show really early,
especially patients in their second pregnancy
can really show even at three months pregnancy,
but others won't show that early.
@taytheg asks, The only thing I've been missing
this whole pregnancy is sushi.
Your obstetrician or your provider
is not gonna want you to eat sushi during pregnancy.
It's because it's undercooked
and you have a higher risk of being exposed
to things that aren't safe for the pregnancy,
like listeria or parasites.
There are some forms of sushi that you probably can eat.
Vegetarian sushi, eel, those are cooked,
so if you're really missing sushi,
you could try those things.
@moonsyoong asks, Does pregnancy change your voice?
The short answer to that is probably yes.
Pregnancy does change voice.
There is a change in sort of that nasal congestion
during pregnancy as all the blood vessels
come to the surface.
Your nose can kind of feel stuffy
and make your voice sound different.
But there's also probably some voice box changes happening
as that progesterone
and estrogen is increasing in your bloodstream.
@You_Addicted2Me says,
Nobody talks about how your teeth shift so bad during
and after pregnancy enough.
As the early part of pregnancy has a lot of progesterone,
there's a change in your gums
and your teeth can move and shift during pregnancy.
It's not uncommon, and maybe we don't talk about it enough.
The one thing that a lot of patients notice
is that when they brush their teeth,
they see a little bit of extra gum bleeding.
That's completely normal in pregnancy.
@kaykiire asks, I don't know why,
but I love that little dark line
that be on pregnant bellies.
That little dark line is called a linea nigra,
and it's essentially where the two parts
of your abdomen came together
when you were in your own mother's uterus.
During pregnancy, all the hormones
can make it so that melanocytes come to the surface,
not only in that linea nigra,
but you can notice darker areas in your skin and your face
and other places.
@Lindambui asks, I was today years old
when I learned about fetal microchimerism.
As a mother, I'm simultaneously awed, happy, and terrified.
Fetal microchimerism is where there are fetal DNA
or particles in the maternal bloodstream.
The mother, after she has the fetus, can have those cells
in that DNA in her maternal bloodstream forever.
When a woman is donating organs to somebody
that she's a genetic match for,
fetal microchimerism can make that match
a little bit more tenuous
because she's got some DNA from her fetuses
in her bloodstream,
so she may not be an exact match.
So those are all the questions for today.
Thanks for asking such fun and interesting questions.
And thanks for watching Pregnancy Support.
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