Baby is measuring around 0.63 inches and growing a millimeter each day!
You can’t feel it yet, but baby is moving around in there. It will be closer to 16-22 weeks before you are able to feel those sweet little flutters.
Baby’s fingers and toes remain webbed, but not for too much longer. Their nose and upper lip are also becoming noticeable!
All other systems and organs continue to develop, helping baby to look more and more well, like a baby as the weeks pass.
If you haven’t had your first ultrasound yet, there’s a good chance you will be having it this week – and how exciting that first ultrasound is! I always like to “warn” women that their first ultrasound will be a transvaginal ultrasound instead of an abdominal one.
Had I not been a labor and delivery nurse when I had my first and privy to this information, I would have been a bit caught off guard, to say the least.
During a transvaginal ultrasound, your provider inserts a lubricated wand into your vagina to visualize baby, the gestational sac, as well as other anatomical structures like the ovaries, fallopian tubes, cervix, and bladder.
Your provider will be looking for a heartbeat during this ultrasound to confirm your pregnancy. You might even hear people call this a “confirmation of pregnancy” appointment. In addition to a heartbeat, you can expect your provider to measure baby to ensure their size matches the estimated due date (EDD) produced from your last menstrual period (LMP).
Typically, if the EDD determined from baby’s measurements is within one week of your EDD from your LMP then there will not be an adjustment made to your dating – are you still with me or have I thoroughly confused you? Basically, they will confirm there is a heartbeat, confirm your due date/ dating, and visualize some of your reproductive organs during this first ultrasound!
It seems like a simple enough question, right? How many months is 8 weeks of pregnancy? You are in your second month of pregnancy right now. You will most commonly hear people (especially your provider and healthcare team) refer to pregnancy in weeks, but you might hear both!
Only seven more months to go but who’s counting? I know it seems like an eternity away but I promise, it does go fast, so try and soak up as much of it as you can (well, maybe once you get out of the nauseous, exhausted, less than ideal first trimester.)