The teaching that the nurse should provide about fetal respiration to the client who is concerned that the baby is going to drown in the uterus because of the fluid is that the oxygen reaches the fetus through the placenta.
Fetal respiration is not the same as respiration in adults. The fetus does not inhale the air into the lungs. Instead the fetus receives oxygen through the placenta, which extracts the oxygen from the blood of mother. Similarly, the carbon dioxide of fetus is released into the mother's blood by the placenta.
Placenta develops from the mother's uterus during pregnancy that connects the fetus with the mother's womb. It acts as a passage for the exchange of several substances between the mother and the fetus.
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Hemostasis is the body's way of stopping injured blood vessels from bleeding. Hemostasis includes clotting of the blood. Too much clotting can block blood vessels that are not bleeding. Consequently, the body has control mechanisms to limit clotting and dissolve clots that are no longer needed. An abnormality in any part of this system that controls bleeding can lead to excessive bleeding or excessive clotting, both of which can be dangerous. When clotting is poor, even a slight injury to a blood vessel may lead to severe blood loss. When clotting is excessive, small blood vessels in critical places can become clogged with clots. Clogged vessels in the brain can cause strokes, and clogged vessels leading to the heart can cause heart attacks. Pieces of clots from veins in the legs, pelvis, or abdomen can travel through the bloodstream to the lungs and block major arteries there (pulmonary embolism).
Postural tremor occurs when a body part is placed in a particular position and is required to maintain that position for a period of time.