Pregnancy of about 09 weeks on Ultrasound.
Saeed Ahmad Saeed Ahmad
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 Published On Jan 5, 2022

This video shows a Pregnancy of about 09 weeks on Ultrasound.
At nine weeks, you will be able to see your baby's head, body, and limbs. You will also be able to hear your little one's heartbeat for the first time with a Doppler monitor. Bring some tissues with you; this can be a very emotional moment.
The baby will probably look more like a bean on the ultrasound screen, and you could hear the heartbeat. Although your baby's external genitals are already developing, it's still too soon for your doctor to determine gender through an ultrasound.
An early ultrasound is often a routine part of prenatal care between 6 and 9 weeks of pregnancy, though it can happen anytime before week 14. But a first-trimester ultrasound isn't standard practice because it's still too early for your practitioner to see your baby in detail.
The head has straightened out and is more fully developed and the ears are continuing to grow, making the baby look more human. Plus, toes are visible, and all of the baby's essential organs, like the heart, brain, kidneys, liver, and lungs, have begun to develop.
If you are at least eight or nine weeks along at your first prenatal visit, your doctor or midwife may use a fetal Doppler (or a fetal Doppler stethoscope) to pick up the sound of your baby's heart beating. Sometimes, the sound of a fetal heartbeat is not detected at this time.
An ultrasound scan is the only way to confirm that you're pregnant with twins. The earliest you're likely to find out is between 10 weeks and 14 weeks when you have your dating scan. Ultrasound is almost foolproof at diagnosing twins.
Now that you're nine weeks pregnant, your little one may be starting to move, thanks to some recent muscle development. But you'll have to wait until sometime in the second trimester to actually feel these movements.
New blood-based tests that rely on cell-free DNA can detect your baby's gender as early as 9 weeks, without increasing the risk of miscarriage, but these are only about 95% accurate in the first trimester.
A pregnancy that doesn't show on an ultrasound scan is called a 'pregnancy of unknown location'. The most common reasons for pregnancy not appearing on the ultrasound scan are: it is too soon to see the baby on the scan. you have had a miscarriage.
The risk of miscarriage falls rapidly with advancing gestation; 9.4% at 6 (completed) weeks of gestation, 4.2% at 7 weeks, 1.5% at 8 weeks, 0.5% at 9 weeks, and 0.7% at 10 weeks.
Signs of fetal demise during pregnancy
No fetal movements.
A mother's sense that something “isn't right” or not "feeling" pregnant anymore.
Vaginal bleeding or uterine cramping.
Absent heartbeat when listening with a Doppler.

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