Tag: pregnancy

  • ‘Taking painkillers during pregnancy may harm baby’s future fertility’

    Pregnant women who take painkillers could be harming the fertility of their unborn child, and even that of future generations, a new study has showed.

    Researchers from Edinburgh University looked at the effects of paracetamol and ibuprofen on samples of human foetal testes and ovaries.

    The results indicated that ovaries exposed to paracetamol for one week had more than 40 per cent fewer egg-producing cells. The effect of ibuprofen was even greater as the number of cells was almost halved.

    Girls produce all of their eggs in the womb, so if they are born with a reduced number it could lead to an early menopause, experts say.

    The studt showed that painkiller exposure during pregnancy could have effects on unborn boys as well.

    Testicular tissue exposed to the drugs had around a quarter fewer sperm-producing cells.

    Scientists found that the drugs can trigger mechanisms in the cells that make changes in the structure of DNA, leaving “marks” that can be inherited.

    As a result, the effects of painkillers on fertility may be passed on to future generations.

    “We could encourage women to think carefully before taking painkillers during pregnancy and to follow the existing guidelines — taking the lowest possible dose for the shortest time possible,” said Dr Rod Mitchell, who led the research.

  • Common disorders occurring in pregnancy (4) Infections

    Some infections are common in pregnancy simply because there is an ongoing pregnancy and the woman is vulnerable as a result of the pregnancy. Other infections may occur notwithstanding the presence of a pregnancy.  Amongst them, I have discussed below.

    Malaria. Malaria kills more children and pregnant women than any other group of people.  Chemicals that women produce in their body cause certain smell during pregnancy and so mosquitoes to them. This is one of the reasons why pregnant women may suffer from malaria more than they should have been had they not been pregnant. Also, the self-defences of pregnant women against infection is lower than when they were not pregnant.

    In all, pregnant women, like anyone else, may have fever, headache, chills, nausea and vomiting, body aches, joint pains due to malaria. The danger of malaria in pregnancy is that if left untreated, the fever and the parasite of mosquito may cause miscarriage. Therefore, a quick attention to suspicion of malaria illness is important at any of stage of pregnancy.  Most of us including pregnant women have access to a lot of antimalarial medications. Use them. If not sure, ensure you go to your doctor and midwife as soon as possible.

     

    Urinary Tract Infection (UTI, Urine infection)

    UTI is in general,  common in women than men, pregnancy or not. This common condition is more common during pregnancy. Once the urine is infected, the woman may feel pain during or after passing urine (pee). Fever, pain in the abdominal sides, or in lower abdomen may be part of the feelings.  She may have the urge to urinate even more than the pregnancy had originally brought upon her.  If UTI is untreated, there is the risk of miscarriage and also kidney damage that may follow.

    Treatment:  Without doubt the doctor attending to the pregnant woman will carry out relevant urine and blood tests to ascertain the diagnosis.

    Most certainly, antibacterial or antibiotics will be advised. On your own, drink more water to help wash the infection away. Also, keep your private (vagina and urethra) area tidy and healthy. Avoid habits that may transfer infection higher into the baby in the womb.  Clean the back passage backwards rather than forward. Wash your hands after each visit to the toilet.

     

    Vaginal thrush

    The vagina area becomes soggier in pregnancy. The high volume secretions that is present in vagina along with diminished self-defence (low immunity) in pregnancy helps the growth of vagina thrush.

    The presence of vaginal thrush could be seen as a thick whitish vaginal discharge. The vaginal and surrounding area may become itchy and sticky.  To confirm, the attending doctor may decide to carry out some laboratory tests called high vaginal swab for culture.  Any infection is a threat to the baby in the womb.

    Treatment:  Most anti-thrush medications will take care of the thrush. Some of these are obtainable over the counter at pharmacies. Alternatively, the antenatal clinics will prescribe appropriate preparation to help deal with the thrush.

     

    Oral hygiene

    The mouth is not spared in the changes that the female body undergoes in pregnancy. As a result, the hormone that affects the body may cause the mouth to be vulnerable to dental infections. The gums may be swollen and painful. The teeth may suffer more caries.

    However, good oral hygiene, regular mouth wash and avoidance of sugary, factory- processed foods and drinks such as carbonated drinks may diminish the oral diseases encountered in pregnancy.

    In spite of what I have been discussing here, other ailments may come upon the pregnant and not just what I have written here. Examples of such illnesses are breathing tract infections (upper respiratory tract infection), changes in colour of skin to becoming darkish and also constipation may be noticed as occurring more by expectant mothers.

    In summary, in the last four weeks, we have taken a look at common illnesses as relates to our environment that affect women during pregnancy. Some preventive measures and treatment options had been offered.

    The important message that I wish to end this series with, is that most illnesses that occur during pregnancy are preventable provided pregnant women and their spouses take the attendance and use of antenatal clinics very seriously. Prevention, after all is better than cure. Time is now to bring the death of women during pregnancy and childbirth to zero. You too can help. Most diseases can be discovered and dealt with at the antenatal clinics. The sooner the pregnant woman registers, the better for everyone.

  • How to deal with common disorders occurring in pregnancy (1)

    How to deal with common disorders occurring in pregnancy (1)

    Pregnancy, by all measures, is a normal occurrence or shall we say, should be a normal event in the life of a pregnant woman and the family.  However, by all accounts, most pregnancies will pass without trouble. That said, a significant number of pregnant women may experience illnesses that are either caused directed by the pregnancy or simply occurring in association with the pregnancy.

    In the coming weeks, we will examine some of these disorders and how you and your family can deal with them. These articles will not address infertility as we had dealt with infertility disorders in the recent past. For today, let us consider Nausea and Vomiting in Pregnancy.  This condition is one that is caused by an ongoing pregnancy though in some occasions nausea and vomiting may be due to other disorder such as malaria that occurs during pregnancy.

    In traditional African culture and in particular in Nigeria at least, a young novice girl might appear to the outside world, as chaste.  Often to the surprise of her guardians or parents, she may start to vomit without the girl knowing the apparent cause in spite of the fact that she had secretly been sexually active.  On intense questioning, she will often deny being sexually active. But the ancient wisdom will often reveal her hidden activities.  Our grandparents, especially older women, would discern a novice girl who is in denial of being pregnant.  Experience mothers will often look at the palm of the vomiting girl or like a doctor would, experience mothers will take a look at the eyes especially the conjunctiva and come to the conclusion, following the examination, that that girl is “pregnant” because the girl looks pale in both her hand and eyes. Suddenly, the girl who had until now been in denial, becomes calm and resign to her fate. Thus, taking the vomiting and the pallor together, our mothers had relied on ancient wisdom to make a diagnosis of early pregnancy.

    Notwithstanding, either planned or unplanned pregnancy, nausea and vomiting is a common development in early pregnancy.

    From about 2 to 4 weeks of pregnancy, one of the earliest symptoms of pregnancy is that the woman suddenly feels the urge to vomit (nausea) and as the days go by, this urge to “throw up” may be accompanied with actual vomiting.  This very unpleasant feelings of nausea and vomiting often occurs in the morning hence the name “morning sickness” that is known to billions of our able and honourable women worldwide.  The morning sickness though gets better as the day goes by may however occur at any time during the day. Rarely does nausea and vomiting become troublesome at night.

    Following the experience and the knowledge that she may vomit her food and water that she ingests, the pregnant woman may start to avoid food. So, her appetite goes down as a result.

    The good news is that by the end of the third month or 12 weeks since she last saw her period, the nausea and vomiting may stop.  In some occasions, the morning sickness can continue until 16-20 weeks but rarely beyond.

    The frequent vomiting may give rise to irritation in the chest as a result of stomach acid coming from stomach, towards the throat.  Also, excessive salivation may accompany the nausea. The problem is how to dispose the excess saliva which cannot be swallowed.  Despite the trouble of nausea, vomiting and excess saliva, the pregnant women are often desiring to eat strange food which is not within her reach: a condition that doctors have termed pica!

    Treatment:  The knowledge that the vomiting will stop eventually may be reassuring.  However, eating small bits of food in spaced intervals may help. Avoiding acidic food such as citrus may also help. Spicy foods should also not be consumed at this time. The idea is to reduce stomach acid to as little as possible.  Further, antacids which is available over the counter in pharmacies may be purchased to help this condition.  Bed rest may also help.

     

    Hyperemesis Gravidarum

    In some situations, the nausea and vomiting may be so severe that, the pregnant woman may suffer liver damage, jaundice, weight loss, poor appetite and low level blood vitamins. Such development from the common and benign nausea and vomiting is a very serious medical illness in pregnancy. Hyperemesis gravidarum constitute a gynaecologic emergency and this should be taken very seriously.

    Attending a competent medical doctor is a top and urgent priority as this conditions threatens the life of the mother and the developing baby.

    The treatment is definitely at the hospital and admission is required to replace loss fluid and vitamins. The idea is to help the woman regain her strength, protect her growing baby and improve her liver function as well as bring the nausea and vomiting to a manageable level.

    At the hospital, the medical team is   likely to give medications that will control the vomiting. Admission and monitoring are likely to continue until such a time when the woman is sufficiently improved.

    As I mentioned earlier, the good news remains that the vomiting is likely to stop not later than 12-16weeks of pregnancy.

     

  • Monkeypox victim loses pregnancy

    Monkeypox victim loses pregnancy

    Miss Wuese Aloo, the suspected monkey pox victim in Benue State, has lost her four-month-old pregnancy.

    This was confirmed at the Benue State University Teaching Hospital (BSUTH), Makurdi.

    Wuese said she contracted the disease from her lorry-driver boyfriend, who is nowhere to be found. He occasionally bring goods to Gboko.

    A youth corps member, from Cross River State, is allegedly responsible for the pregnancy. He has been quarantined at BSUTH while tests are being conducted

    According to the hospital management, the blood sample of the first victim has been taken to Senegal for screening; the result is being expected.

  • ‘Condom can prevent STDs, unplanned pregnancy’

    Any Nigerian who is sexually active has been enjoined to always use a condom, not only to prevent unwanted pregnancy but to also protect against contracting sexually transmitted diseases (STDs).

    Speaking at the media launch of Flex condom in Lagos, the Managing Director/CEO, Society for Family Health Nigeria, Sir Bright Ekweremadu, said, “We are expanding and launching our new condom series in different brands, flavour and texture to ensure that every sexually active Nigerian is able to find a condom of their choice to meet the dual demands of condom use. This is because Nigerians consume over 400 million condoms annually, but the 400 million condom consumption could fall below expectation based on the society’s estimation of unprotected sex in the country.

    “Flex condoms offer protection against sexually transmitted diseases as well as prevent unwanted pregnancies and are available for different personalities making it the ideal choice for young and old sexually active males and females.”

    Ekweremadu further said: “The new Flex condom packs the best of precision manufacturing and stylish design with top class craftsmanship and functionality to deliver extra sensation for maximum pleasure. With its unique performance and boasting of the internationally tested latex, we predict that these new products will be accepted by discerning consumers”.

    He said the Flex condoms comply with NAFDAC and international standards. Each batch of Flex condom is electronically tested both at the manufacturer’s world-class laboratory and here in Nigeria in a condom laboratory by Federal Ministry of Health staff. For instance, it is a fact that Flex condoms stretch ± 7 times its own length before breaking. The new variants include Flex Classic condoms which are ribbed and strawberry flavoured designed to provide extra sensation and heightened pleasure while Flex Brown Sugar condom is a premium studded and chocolate flavoured condom for maximum stimulation and thrill.

    Others include Flex Spice premium latex condom which is an ultra-thin and strawberry flavoured condom designed to provide that natural feel whereas Flex Pleasure Unlimited condom is a unique premium bubble gum flavoured condom offering extra pleasure and maximum delight.

    The Flex Treasure Island is a combo pack of all flavoured variants: Flex Spice Condom, Flex Brown Sugar condom and Flex Pleasure Unlimited condom, offering three matchless delights in a box and Stamina Condom brand is a Lidocaine–treated condom offering longer lasting excitement.

    The Flex Classic, Spice and Brown Sugar Condoms, offer a unique combination of flavoured and textured condom at the same time creating extra spice and enhancing sexual delight and is the first of its kind in Nigeria. These variants appeal to a wide range of individuals with different personalities; the adventurous and heightened pleasure seeker; the flavour appeals to romantic lovers; as well as the conventional and predictable ones.

  • Success Story: How I Finally Got Pregnant after 13 years of Battling with Hormonal Imbalance and Unexplained Infertility!

    Success Story: How I Finally Got Pregnant after 13 years of Battling with Hormonal Imbalance and Unexplained Infertility!

    It’s harder to get pregnant than you think. That may be music to your ears if you’re young, single, and nowhere near ready for kids. But for many couples trying to conceive, the reality of infertility is daunting, stressful, and extremely life-interrupting.

    Now right below is the success story of how Mrs. Adaobi was able to conquer her many years of unfruitfulness and what you can learn from it to help you too or anyone you may know going through this same challenges.

    Now Here is Adaobi Story:

    What was your fertility journey prior to finding The Natural Solution?

    My husband and I met in 2009. I had been diagnosed with PCOS at the age of 21 and had given up any hope of ever having a baby. I tried to be okay with helping to raise my step-daughter, but I really, truly wanted a child of my own and knowing her made that desire all the stronger. We decided pretty quickly to stop using BC and see what happened, but it was pretty obvious to me that nothing was happening.

    I started tracking what cycle I had and using natural medicine, including Vitex, Red Raspberry and other traditional herbs, but still nothing happened. After 7 years of trying, I was ready to give up and admit defeat. We didn’t have the money for IVF and I refused to take money or resources away from my step-child in the hopes of maybe having a baby of my own. I told myself I would try one more time and if it didn’t happen, I was done.

    I heard on the Natural Solution to Get Pregnant and Have A Baby; Curing Infertility, and Balancing Hormones and that one of the fertility superfoods was Royal Jelly. I bought a bottle in November of 2015, figuring I had nothing to lose. Click Here Now 

    On New Year’s Day 2016, after less than 2 months of using Royal Jelly alongside the Vitolize Women herbal supplement for women, I took the last pregnancy test I had in the house. My reasoning was a) what better time to end this journey than NYD and b) I had been feeling really weird in the past few weeks. I about had a heart attack when I saw the first positive pregnancy test in my entire life. https://goo.gl/YvJWIj

    2My baby boy was born August 7th, 2016. He is 8 weeks old and I call him my miracle. He is the light of my life. After 13 years of infertility and 7 years of TTC, I know I could not have lasted on this journey, let alone succeeded in my quest, without the support of both the Royal Jelly and the Vitolize Women. My family is complete; I have my daughter and my son. Click Here To Get Yours 

    What information and products made the difference for you?

    I believe that the herbal support made the most difference. I used Royal Jelly consistently, as well as Vitolize Women. And these are the two products that made the most difference to my fertility. I got pregnant within 2 months of beginning to take it. https://goo.gl/YvJWIj

    What is some advice you would give others going through their fertility journey?

    There is always hope, even when it seems hopeless. If this is truly what you want, don’t be afraid to fight for it and advocate for yourself. It’s ok to lose it and cry and be mad and feel everything that comes with this journey. And it’s ok to continue to pick yourself up and dust yourself off and try again. Click Here Now 

    How are you and your baby doing now?

    My baby boy is 8 weeks old now. He was born 5 weeks early and spent 2 weeks in the NICU. I can’t say the journey has been easy, but I wouldn’t change a single thing. He is truly the light of my life and has been a joy to our entire family. He is the first grandson on either side and I can honestly say he makes all of us appreciate life that much more. Click Here To Get Yours 

    Call/Whatsapp- 07039699584

    Email- fasttoheal@gmail.com

  • ‘PREGNANT’ MOTHER OF THREE ARRESTED WITH N20M COCAINE

    ‘PREGNANT’ MOTHER OF THREE ARRESTED WITH N20M COCAINE

    Dorothy Onyekasi had all the features of a pregnant woman when she stepped into the arrival hall of the Murtala Muhammed International Airport, Ikeja, yesterday, on her way from Dubai, United Arabs Emirate (UAE).

    Her dressing, protruding tummy and manner of walking were true to type.

    But that was until she had to go through screening by the National Drug Law Enforcement Agency (NDLEA) whose agents found her pregnancy to be fake.

    Instead of pregnancy, Onyekas, 41, had strapped to her body substance suspected to be cocaine.

    The mother of three, according to the agency’s spokesman, Mr. Mitchell Ofoyeju, faked her pregnancy with 86 pellets of substance that tested positive for cocaine.

    He said: “The drug was intercepted during the inward screening of passengers on an Emirates flight from Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

    “The substance has a total weight of 1.720 kilogrammes with an estimated street value of N20.6 million.”

    The NDLEA commander at the Lagos airport, Ahmadu Garba, said the wraps of cocaine would have been easily mistaken for pregnancy.

    “It was discovered that the suspect kept 86 wraps of cocaine inside a waist bag which was tied to her stomach.

    “The drug was detected by NDLEA officers on her arrival from Dubai. The drug was immediately packed and weighed in her presence.

    “It had a gross weight of 1.720 kilogrammes,” Ahmadu stated.

    She is expected to be charged to court soon.

    The suspect said it was all her fault, saying: “While I was preparing to return, I met a man in Dubai who gave me the drug and promised to give me enough money to expand my business.

    “He also told me that when I get to Nigeria, he would call his partner to collect the drug and give me my money. When I got here, the drug was detected at the airport and I was arrested. It is all my fault. If only I was contented with the profit from the sales of my goods; I would not have been in this problem”.

    Dorothy who hails from Enugu State is a Junior Secondary School certificate holder.

  • Zika outbreak: UN warns against laws restricting pregnancy

    Zika outbreak: UN warns against laws restricting pregnancy

    The United Nations (UN) has called for the repeal of laws and policies that restrict access to sexual and reproductive health services in contravention of international standards.

    The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Al Hussein, disclosed this in a statement made available to newsmen on Friday in New York.

    The statement said that the UN position was in response to advice to women by some governments to delay getting pregnant due to the possible link between the rampaging Zika virus and neurological disorders affecting newborns.

    According to the statement, upholding women’s human rights was essential if the response to the Zika health emergency would be effective.

    “Clearly, managing the spread of Zika is a major challenge to governments in Latin America.

    “However, the advice of some governments to women to delay getting pregnant ignores the reality that many women and girls simply cannot exercise control over when they become pregnant.

    “The circumstance is made more difficult in environment where sexual violence is so common,’’ the statement said.

    The statement noted that “in situations where sexual violence is rampant and sexual and reproductive health services are unavailable, efforts to halt Zika crisis will not be enhanced by stopping women from getting pregnant’’.

    The statement stressed that, amid the continuing spread of the virus, authorities must ensure that their public health responses were pursued in conformity with human health-related rights obligations.

    “Upholding human rights is essential to an effective public health response.
    “This requires that governments ensure that women, men and adolescents have access to comprehensive and affordable quality sexual and reproductive health services and information, without discrimination.

    “Health services must be delivered in a way that ensures the woman’s informed consent, respect for her dignity and the guarantee of her privacy.

    “Laws and policies that restrict her access to these services must be urgently reviewed in line with human rights obligations in order to ensure the right to health for all in practice,’’ it stated.

    The News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) reports that the World Health Organisation (WHO) has declared a public health emergency on the spread of the virus.

    The Organisation had said that causative link between Zika and microcephaly – babies born with abnormally small heads and underdeveloped brain- and Guillain-Barré Syndrome (a neurological condition), is still under investigation.

  • MYSTERY BABY: 33-yr-old woman delivered of first born from four-year-old pregnancy

    MYSTERY BABY: 33-yr-old woman delivered of first born from four-year-old pregnancy

    Doctors told us she had three sets of fibroid in her womb, says husband

    It’s an abnormal medical record —Gynaecologist

    It was a mixture of shock and amazement in the sleepy town of Ikugbomire in Obafemi Owode Local Government Area, Ogun State, on Wednesday as a woman was delivered of a baby from a pregnancy she had carried for four years. The question on every lip was, ‘could it be true that Mrs Oluwabunmi Ogidan was delivered of a baby?’ The obscure settlement instantly became a Mecca of sorts as people trooped to Alayo Vantage Hospital from far and near for a glimpse of the miracle baby.

    Before she was delivered of the baby, the happy mother had become the butt of taunts and ridicule in the community, particularly after a scan conducted on her protruding tummy indicated that all she had in it was fibroid. Among the cruel jokes targeted at her was the question as to whether the baby in her womb would come out with a full set of teeth or walk and talk the very day it is born.

    The arrival of the baby therefore marked the end of years of anxiety for 33-year-old Oluwabunmi and her 42-year-old husband, Bankole Ogidan.  It was said that for two years after their well-attended wedding, there were no signs of pregnancy. And when the pregnancy finally came, it turned out to be their biggest headache. But all that came to an end after she was delivered of the baby girl in the natural way.

    When our correspondents visited Alayo Vantage Hospital yesterday, Oluwabunmi was still on the hospital bed, trying to come to terms with the mystery surrounding the birth of her baby. According to her husband, Bankole Ogidan, their wedding took place on August 27, 2011. “We were full of hope about having children and raising a complete family. But we had to wait till August 2013 before she got pregnant exactly two years after,” he said.

    “We went for pregnancy test and it was confirmed positive. A few days after, my wife complained that she was feeling pains in her womb. We went to a midwife who told us that the pain was not a problem; that the pregnancy was intact. I was not satisfied, so I took her to another hospital (name withheld) where we did a scan but the doctor said he didn’t see any pregnancy. The doctor said there had been a miscarriage. I asked him that shouldn’t there be an outflow of blood if she had a miscarriage? The doctor said yes. I told him that we had not witnessed anything like that and he was shocked.

    Scared by the doctor’s pronouncement, Bankole ran to the pastor of his church, Prophet Emmanuel Ogbara, who assured him that God had told him the pregnancy was intact. A couple of weeks later, Ogidan went back with his wife to the hospital but they were told that what she had in her womb was fibroid. They left for the General Hospital, Gbagada, where they were asked to see a gynaecologist. Again, the gynaecologist told them that what he saw in Oluwabunmi’s stomach was multiple fibroid with no chance of conception.

    “All this while, my wife’s menstruation had ceased,” Bankole said. “It was only once after the pregnancy was sighted that we observed that little blood came out but stopped almost immediately. We left there for the Government Hospital in Owode, Ogun State.

    “Thereafter, we returned for a scan session. The gynaecologist said there were three sets of fibroid where the baby ought to be, but that the way my wife looked, she appeared like a woman who was ready for delivery. He said he would act fast and do an x-ray that would reveal more. That was on March 25, 2014.

    “We did the x-ray but we were told that though they believed in God, from all medical indications, there was no more pregnancy in the womb. They said the uterus was elongated, blocked with a concentration of urine fibroid and the white fallopian tube was outlined. They concluded that it was fibroid. I asked if she could get pregnant and they said no.”

    Meanwhile, Oluwabunmi’s stomach had protruded as if she was due for delivery. People whispered wherever she passed in the neighbourhood and her story was used for jokes. Bankole said he could not even think of sleeping with his wife because of the delicate nature of her condition all through the period.

    “There was pressure from all corners—family, friends and well-wishers—who all had their suggestions as to the solution. Some said we were hearing wrongly from God,” he said.

    Asked if he was not afraid that his wife would die in the process of waiting for a baby, he said: “I did not worry about death at all. I was only more inspired to wait on God. As a matter of fact, we stopped going for medical opinion. As far as we were concerned, they had no good news for us, so we resorted to our church and prayer.

    “On the 10th of September, 2015, my wife became terribly ill with signs of labour. I had to look for any hospital in sight because her condition was bad. That was how we got to this hospital.

    “After giving her the initial treatment, we were told to go for another scan. To the glory of God, the doctor here said he had seen a baby; that my wife was carrying four months pregnancy.”

    But the mystery again was how the pregnancy could be four months old when he was not making love to his wife, and his wife’s protruding stomach was there for all to see?

    “At the church, the prophet confirmed again that the child had all along been there; only that scan could not pick it. So the hospital continued to nurture the baby for antenatal. But here again, they still saw fibroid in the womb. But to the glory of God 27th January this year, our baby finally arrived,” Bankole said.

    But that was not all. After some time, the baby was said to have “got lost” in the womb.

    The hospital’s matron said: “We had to do an operation. When we did, we found that contrary to scan reports, we met a different thing in the womb. It was a sac with pus inside. It was not fibroid. And looking inside, we didn’t see any baby. But I remembered that I used to hear sound inside Mrs Ogidan’s womb, so the doctor searched further; the baby was  hidden in the uterus.

    “We thank God. It’s a miracle. The sac was so big that it swallowed up the uterus where the baby was. The sac was so big that the uterus could not be easily found. The doctor said he had never seen such a thing before.”

    But did science fail in the case of the Ogidans’ baby?

    According to Dr Sam Akinyemi, a consultant on naturopathic gynaecologist, “This is an abnormal medical record. But nothing is impossible in this world. All homo sapiens must take note of that.

    “It is the joy of every pregnant woman that at 40 weeks or before then, the woman must fall into labour. When it does not happen, it becomes a major concern to the physician and the patient herself.

    “In natural medical gynaecology, we have had cases of that nature. It can be the result of retardation in hormonal production in the pregnant patient or mother. And metaphysically, nature won’t seize to amaze us in its power.”

    On his part, a medical consultant, Dr O Salau, said: “Well there are lots of things people do to have children nowadays, especially with the fact that adoption these days is becoming a herculean task. Some put things under their wrapper, pretending to be pregnant, while others carry the pregnancy for them.

    “I have seen a woman who came with protruding abdomen but no fetal part on examination or by scan. But the reality is that in a situation like the one you mentioned, the fibroid would be residual except she was delivered by caesarean operation and the fibroid was removed.

    “Really, one could have a situation where the fibroid degenerates but usually incompletely. The issue of carrying pregnancy for that period is completely untrue.”

  • Wife fakes pregnancy

    A MARRIED woman has been exposed in Abia State for carrying fake pregnancy.

    The ‘delivery’ took place at Mben hospital on Asaga Road, Ebem Ohafia in Abia State.

    The Chief Medical Director of Mben Hospital, Dr. Bernard Orji, who narrated the incident, said a woman of about 20 years, Joy, was brought in around 7pm; having severe labour pains and was immediately wheeled to the labour room.

    Dr. Orji said the fake pregnancy was discovered during examination. He said Joy wrapped huge pieces of clothing around her abdomen for nine months to perfect her wicked act.

    Asked if the woman was registered with his clinic, Dr. Orji said no, stressing that it was normal in the rural set up for pregnant women to stroll into a hospital for delivery without being registered.

    Joy said she pretended to be pregnant and due for delivery so that her husband could complete her marital rites as she felt he was not serious about marrying her.

    She insisted to have done no wrong and had no regrets for her actions.

    A close neighbour, who pleaded for anonymity, said she suspected child trafficking as Joy’s game plan and suggested that the police be involved.