DIY Baby! Your Essential Pregnancy Handbook

By Shelley S. Binkley, M.D.

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DIY Baby eases all your pregnancy worries with the gentle mentoring of a double-insider’s view: that of a mother and obstetrician who’s delivered over 3000 babies. DIY Baby won the 2008 Silver Mom’s Choice Award for the category: Pregnancy and Birth. It also garnered a stellar review from Reader’s View, and is a finalist for the 2008 Foreward Magazine and Eric Hoffer awards for independent publishers.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Chapter 1: The Case of the Missing Period

  • When am I due? Naegele’s Rule: An Easy Way to Find Your Due Date

  • Early Ultrasound

  • What Causes Twins?

  • Sciences Notes: Fertilization to Implantation

  • Pregnancy Dating

  • Folic Acid and Early Nutrition: Alcohol, Tobacco,Drugs and Medications

  • How Much Weight Should I Gain?, Body Mass Index, Exercise in Pregnancy

  • Early Symptoms of Pregnancy: Breast Changes,Genital Changes,Cramping,Fatigue,Nausea,Spotting and Bleeding,Emotions

  • Choosing Your Ob Provider

  • Lay Midwives and Home Birth

  • Choosing Where to Deliver: Hospital or Birth Center

  • Your First Prenatal Visit

  • For Dads: Mom’s Early Pregnancy Symptoms; How They Impact You

  • Office Notes: Ambiguity About Pregnancy

Chapter 2: Miscarriage and Early Pregnancy Loss

  • What is a Miscarriage?

  • Incidence and Causes

  • Diagnosing and Treating Miscarriage

  • Ectopic Pregnancy

  • Incomplete Miscarriage

  • Second Trimester Pregnancy Loss

  • Office Notes: Terry’s Twins

Chapter 3: Hormones and Optimism: Ten to Twenty Weeks

  • Estrogens: Physical Effects, Mental and Emotional Effects

  • Progesterone: Physical Effects, Mental and Emotional Effects

  • Human Chorionic Gonadotropin (the Pregnancy hormone):Physical Effects, Mental and Emotional Effects

  • Fetal Adrenal Glands and Hormones

  • The Importance of Cholesterol

  • Other Hormones, Relaxin

  • Second Trimester Physical Symptoms: Bleeding and Spotting, Energy Level, Appetite Changes

  • Science Notes: Fetal Movement

  • Early Genetic Screening: Nuchal Translucency and Early Ultrasound, First Trimester Serum Screening, Second Trimester Serum Screening, Mid-Trimester Ultrasound, Amniocentesis,

  • Chorionic Villus Sampling

  • For Dads: Intercourse and Mood Changes

Chapter 4: Viability: Twenty to Twenty-Six Weeks

  • Viability Defined

  • Preterm Birth: Defined and Incidence

  • Gestational Age and Survival

  • Preterm Birth: Prevention and Recognition, Risk Factors

  • Preterm Labor Symptoms

  • Round Ligament Pain or Contractions?

  • Diagnosis of Preterm Labor

  • Early Symtpoms Change

  • Treatments for Preterm Labor

  • Medications to Stop Contractions: Terbutaline, Magnesium Sulfate, Nifedipine, Indocin, Sulindac

  • Betamethasone

  • Antibiotics

  • Consequences for Newborns of Preterm Birth

  • Science Notes: Cerebral Palsy

  • Office Notes: Story of Mom to a Preemie

Chapter 5: Nesting: Twenty-Six to Thirty-Six Weeks

  • Prenatal Visits: Tummy Checks and Heart Tones

  • Gestational Diabetes

  • Pre-Eclampsia

  • Rhesus Facor (Rh)

  • Group B Strep

  • Physical Changes in the Third Trimester: Pelvic Pressure, Constipation, Sleep Changes, Braxton Hicks Contractions, Breast Leakage, Vaginal Discharge, Sex in the Third Trimester, Emotional Status

  • Fetal Movement: Sleep Cycles, Breathing, Hiccups

  • Prenatal Classes

  • Perinatal Massage

  • What to Pack

  • Birth Plans

  • For Dads: Pregnancy “Mania”

Chapter 6: It’s Time! Labor and Deliver Me

  • Keys to Successful Vaginal Birth: Passenger, Pelvis, Power

  • Condition Your Body for Labor: You Can Affect the Outcome

  • Condition Your Mind: Abdominal Breathing and Progressive Muscle Relaxation

  • Your Birth Plan

  • When will IT happen?

  • How long will IT take?

  • Phases of Labor: Early, Active; First, Second Third

  • Science Notes: What Causes Labor to Begin?

  • Early, Prodromal, and False Labor

  • Spontaneous Rupture of the Membranes

  • Bloody Show

  • The Delivery Center

  • The Labor Nurse

  • Other non-Ob-Provider Delivery Personnel: Baby Care Providers, Nursing and Medical Students

  • The Labor Room (LDR)

  • The Fetal Monitor

  • Fetal Heart Rate During Labor

  • Maternal Position Change and Oxygen Administration

  • Cerebral Palsy and Intrapartum Hypoxia

  • Internal Monitors: Fetal Scalp Electrode, Intra-Uterine Pressure Catheter

  • What Will Labor Be Like?

  • Admission and Early Labor, Wearing Your Own Clothes, Walking and Eating, Early Labor Contractions, Active Labor Contractions, Walking, Swiveling, “Doing the Ball”

  • Science Notes: Rotation and Descent of the Baby in Labor

  • Pictures: 20 pages of photos with detailed explanations of what happens inside the body during labor

  • Positions of the Baby in the Uterus

  • Important Diameters of the Fetal Head

  • Pelvic Anatomy

  • Fetal Monitors and Intra-Uterine Pressure Monitors

  • The Faces of Labor

  • Positions for Active Labor

  • Positions for Pushing

  • Supporting the Perineum

  • Delivery Maneuvers

  • Back Labor

  • Asynclitism or “Tilted Head”

  • “Transition”

  • Pain Medication Options: Intravenous Narcotics, Regional Anesthetics

  • Pushing

  • The “C” Position

  • Hips Flexed and Out

  • Normal Duration of Second Stage

  • Special Techniques for Delivering the Occiput Posterior or Asynclitic Baby: Pushing With a Towel, Hand and Knees

  • Baby Delivers!

  • Tear vs. Episiotomy

  • Science Notes: Anatomy of the Pelvic Floor

  • “Shredding”

  • “Caput Succedaneum” (Funny Looking Head)

  • Science Notes: Baby’s First Breath

  • Delivery of the Placenta

  • For Dads: “Shock and Awe”

  • Office Notes: Birth Plan Takes a Left Turn

Chapter 7: Help is On its Way: Medical Intervention at Term and During Birth

  • Delivery Usually Uneventful: The Big Picture

  • The National Cesarean Section Rate

  • The Breech Position, Breech Delivery of a Second Twin

  • Induction of Labor

  • Some Reasons for Labor Inductions

  • Prostaglandins Ripen the “Unfavorable” Cervix

  • Augmentation of Labor with Amniotomy

  • Induction of Labor With Oxytocin

  • Augmentation of Labor with Oxytocin

  • Labor Dysfunction

  • Other Reasons for Intervention: Fetal Intolerance of Labor, Cord Compression, Placental Insufficiency

  • Shoulder Dystocia

  • Assisted Vaginal Delivery

  • Safety Requirements for Vacuum/Forceps

  • Vacuum

  • Forceps

  • Science Notes: Vacuum vs. Forceps Delivery

  • Illustrations: Vacuum Delivery

  • Cesarean Section

  • Recovery from A C-Section

  • VBAC versus Elective Repeat Section

  • Patient Choice Cesarean Section

  • Management of Third Stage (Delivery of Placenta) and Post-Partum Hemorrhage: Uterine Atony, Retained Placenta, Lacerations

  • Birth Plans Revisited

  • Home Births

  • For Dads: Going to C-Section

  • Office Notes: The Longest Labor

Chapter 8: DIY Baby! What You Need to Know if You’re Considering Home Birth

  • Home Birth–Why: Personal, Financial, Spiritual/Religious, Access to Care

  • Home Birth–Safer Than You Think??

  • Are You a Good Physical Candidate to Attempt Home Birth?

  • Are You a Good Mental/Emotional Candidate for Home Birth?

  • Establish Relationships Prior to Delivery

  • Contraindications to Attempting Home Birth

  • Who Should Attend Your Birth?

  • Preparation is Key: Supplies Necessary for Home Birth

  • Managing Labor at Home

  • Delivery of the Placenta

  • Dealing With Heavy Bleeding

  • Keep Your Eye on the Ball

Chapter 9: A Perfect Love, A Perfect Life: Newborn and Post-Partum Period

  • A Love Like No Other

  • The First Week Post-Partum

  • Inconsolable Crying (Colic)

  • Pacifiers and Artificial Nipples

  • Breast-Feeding and Lactation: Latch-On, Inverted and Flat Nipples

  • What is Breast Milk and When Does it “Come In”?

  • Science Notes: Composition of Breast Milk: Why “Breast is Best”?

  • Milk Let-Down

  • Foremilk and Hindmilk: Empty One Breast Fully Before Switching

  • Asymmetry in Production and Size

  • Setting

  • Nursing Holds

  • Frequency of Nursing: How To Tell if Your Baby’s Getting Enough

  • Duration of Nursing Sessions: Nourishment vs. Comfort Nursing

  • Milk Supply, Breast Pumps

  • Introducing a Bottle: Feeding the Baby Pumped Milk or Formula

  • Storing Pumped Milk and Supplementing

  • Formula Feeding

  • Nipple Problems

  • Mastitis

  • Suppression of Milk Supply

  • Neonatal Jaundice

  • Baby Blues and Post-Partum Depression: Why They Occur and How to Tell the Difference: How to Know When You Need Help

  • Feelings of Detachment

  • Rehabilitating Your Pelvic Floor

  • Kegels to the Rescue!

  • Sex After Baby, Sex Drive Rebounds, Anatomic Changes

  • Mile Markers: Six and Twelve Weeks

  • Some Nuts and Bolts of Infant Care: Head Control, Car Seat, Pediatrician Visits, Circumcision, Preventing SIDS: Back to Sleep and No Smoking

  • For Dads: Why the Breasts May be Off-Limits

Chapter 10: The Leading Man–Knight in Shining Armor: Tips for Dads

  • “Shock and Awe”

  • Fatherhood: Long-Term Commitment, Not a Rite of Passage

  • Conquering Fear

  • How to Be the Knight in Shining Armor

  • You Will Be Ignored–It’s Nothing Personal

  • Transform Setbacks Into Opportunities

  • Ambiguity

  • Breasts

  • Sex After Baby–Patience–She’s Not There Yet

  • How to Get Her Interested Again

  • Work and Family Balance; Consistency

  • How to Recognize Post-Partum Depression

  • The Family Bed

  • Dad’s Baby Blues: No Phase Lasts Forever

  • Office Notes: Matthew’s Story (of Becoming a Father at 50)

Epilogue: What I Learned from My Own Pregnancies

Knowledge is Power

I want to empower you with knowledge and de-mystify pregnancy. Many of the questions I answer on cafemom.com and other pregnancy sites are thoroughly covered in DIY Baby. Many of my posts on pregnancy are excerpts from the book. I regularly add content to the book via this website.