The chart below describes what you might find
how you can expect your baby to change as they adjust to the world around them.
|
Body Part |
What to Expect |
Why This Happens |
When Will It Change? |
|
Head |
Your baby’s head may appear
cone-shaped. A baby's skull is made up of many plates of bone. One
plate of bone can slide over the edge of another.
Babies have a diamond shaped “soft spot”
or fontanelle on the top of the head (anterior) and a second one that is
shaped like a triangle above the nape of the neck (posterior).
Fontanelles are the spaces where the plates of bone meet. These spaces
are covered by tough protective membranes so that parents do not have to
worry about injuring these spaces.
A newborn's head may look swollen and
bruised.
|
This allows the head to change shape as
the baby moves through the birth canal.
Allows for the growth of the brain
This happens because of the pressure on
the babies head during labour and delivery. Vacuum extractors and
forceps can also cause bruising. |
Will return to normal in a few days.
Anterior closes within 18 months
Posterior closes 8 – 12 weeks |
|
Eyes |
Baby’s eyes may be bloodshot and may
even have some blood spots.
Your newborn will be able to see clearly
12 to 18 inches away, the distance to your face when you cradle your
baby.
A newborn sees the world as if viewing a
black and white TV.
It is common for newborns to have
difficulty bringing both eyes together to look at an object.
|
The pressure on the baby’s head during
birth. |
Will resolve within a few days.
By 6 months of age, a baby is capable of
seeing distances equal to an adult's.
Baby is able to see colour by 2 months
of age.
This improves by 6 months of age.
|
|
Ears |
A newborn's ears are often flattened to
the side of the head as they move through the birth canal. At birth,
the ear canals are filled with amniotic fluid.
|
|
Fluid will drain out within the first
day and your baby will be able to hear well. Your newborn was able to
hear voices while in the uterus and will now recognize those familiar
voices.
|
|
Breathing and First Noises |
Your baby may sound like they have
mucous built up when breathing, and may even sneeze. Breathing through
their nose, newborns can be quite noisy, grunting and snorting, even
stopping for brief periods. |
Your baby does not have a cold. It is
moisture in the baby’s upper respiratory passages.
|
It may take weeks for this to clear.
|
|
Nose |
Baby's nose is flattened
|
Due to small space in birth canal |
Will correct itself in a few days.
|
|
Skin |
While in the uterus, baby's skin is
protected by a white coating called vernix. As the pregnancy approaches
40 weeks, the vernix begins to disappear, beginning with the hands and
feet and progressing. The unprotected skin of the feet and hands may be
very dry, even peeling.
At birth, your baby may be a blue-red in
colour, changing to more of a healthy pink colour with the first
breaths.
May find baby’s hands and feet feel cool
and look blue.
Fine downy hair on the face, shoulders
and back.
At birth, some newborns have red
coloured patches of skin at the nape of the neck, on the eyelids or
upper lip.
|
Because immature system of circulating
blood
Helps to keep newborn warm.
These "stork bites" are believed to be
pressure points that develop during pregnancy from the position of
baby's head in the pelvis. |
Depending on when your baby is born, you
may find vernix only in your baby's creases and folds.
Bluish colour should disappear minutes
after birth
Goes away in the first weeks of life.
Probably will disappear by your baby's
first birthday.
|
|
Genitals |
Breast tissue of both sexes, including
the nipples, may be swollen. Newborn girls may leak a milky discharge
from the nipples. The genitals may also be swollen and red (the scrotum
of newborn boys and labia of girls). A bloody or mucous type discharge
may even be released from the vagina.
|
Both baby girls and boys are exposed to
high levels of hormones in the uterus. |
Over the first weeks of life, these
hormonal effects will disappear. |
|
Umbilical Cord |
The umbilical cord is a shiny blue-
white colour.
The cord contains no nerves so your baby
will feel no pain while cord is clamped and cut at birth. As the cord
decays it will darken to black in colour. When falling off, it may bleed
slightly.
|
|
Dries and falls off (most) often by 2
weeks of age |