Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Exercise During Pregnancy

Women who continue exercising regularly through the end of their pregnancies (three times a week for at least 20 minutes at a moderately hard to hard level of exertion) demonstrated the following reduced risks during the birth process...




* 35% decrease in the need for pain relief

* 75% decrease in the incidence of maternal exhaustion

* 50% decrease in the need to artificially rupture membranes

* 50% decrease in the need to induce or augment labor with pitocin

* 50% decrease in the need to intervene because of abnormalities in the fetal heart rate

* 55% decrease in the need for episiotomy

* 75% decrease in the need for operative intervention (forceps or cesarean section)

In addition, check these out...



* More than 65% of the exercising women delivered in less than four hours.

* 72% delivered before their due date (but fewer of them delivered before 37 weeks--preterm--than the control group). The exercising women delivered, on average, 5-7 days earlier than active women who did not exercise regularly.

* Significant reduction in the incidence of umbilical cord entanglement.

* Much lower incidence of fetus passing meconium from distress.

* Umbilical cord blood samples indicated that babies of exercising moms remained relatively stress-free with plenty of oxygen. They seemed to tolerate the stresses of labor and delivery better than the control group.

* The exercising mothers' infants were, on average, 14 oz lighter but overall growth was not compromised.

* Placentas of exercising mothers are larger, more efficient, and healthier-looking.

* Infants born to exercising mothers were more alert postpartum and needed less consolation from others.
 
LINK:
 
http://birthfaith.blogspot.com/2010/06/positive-impact-of-prenatal-exercise.html

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