bell notificationshomepageloginNewPostedit profiledmBox

Hoots : If a pregnant woman's tummy is pressed hard, can the baby in her womb get hurt? I am 22 weeks in my pregnancy and my baby does kick and stretch at times. Yesterday he poke a limb/head/butt out on my tummy which I could see - freshhoot.com

10% popularity   0 Reactions

If a pregnant woman's tummy is pressed hard, can the baby in her womb get hurt?
I am 22 weeks in my pregnancy and my baby does kick and stretch at times. Yesterday he poke a limb/head/butt out on my tummy which I could see a firm lump. I showed my friend, and she pressed on the lump quite hard , causing the lump slowly disappeared and the baby to reflex a kick on another spot.

I am worried if my friend had pressed too hard on the limbs/head/butt of my baby, will my baby get injured or broken limbs?

I do still feel kicks after that but no more firm lumps since (1day ago) ..
Should I be worried?


Load Full (3)

Login to follow hoots

3 Comments

Sorted by latest first Latest Oldest Best

10% popularity   0 Reactions

It's fine to 'poke' the outside of the baby bump. In fact it's the first 'game' you can play with your little one. :)

Is it okay to poke my pregnant belly?
Sure… if that’s what you want to do. It might seem weird at first, since baby is so small and still developing. But your baby is incredibly well cushioned in there. Remember, she’s floating in a sac of amniotic fluid, which is surrounded by a thick, muscular organ (your uterus). On top of that is your skin and belly fat (more cushioning!).
Of course, just because it won’t hurt baby, doesn’t mean she can’t feel you poking — in fact, baby will probably feel you move and poke before you can start to feel her, which is usually at around 18 to 20 weeks. And when baby’s big enough, she might even poke back!

Kelly Kasper, MD, ob-gyn and associate clinical professor at the Indiana University School of Medicine, in "Is It Safe To Poke My Belly?" for The Bump
A baby in the womb is quite well-protected, it takes a hard fall - the kind which injures mum - to injure the baby:

In the first trimester, a thick, muscular uterus and an even more protective pelvic bone shield your baby, so it is nearly impossible to injure her if you trip and fall. By the fifth month, however, your uterus grows beyond the protective shell of your pelvic bone. While the chances of injury from a simple fall are still very unlikely, many pregnancy worries stem from these changes in your body.
... There is no need to worry unduly about minor falls. Your baby is well protected by the natural shock absorbers of your abdominal muscles, uterine muscles, fetal membranes and the amniotic fluid, all of which cushion any outside blows. It would take an accident that seriously injures mommy to have even a remote chance of injuring baby.

Growing Concerns, Ask Dr Sears


10% popularity   0 Reactions

The impact is absorbed by your own belly, and the baby is floating in a bag of water, which absorbs even more. Unless you're seriously bruised or still hurting from the poke, the baby will be fine.

You'll start taking damage to your own belly before the baby is at risk, so don't worry about it.


10% popularity   0 Reactions

I asked our OBGYN the same thing basically. He explained that it takes a really hard hit to go past the barrier provided by the amniotic fluid. So something like a hard push is definitely not a problem.

Also, we were advised by our doctor that my wife resting on her stomach was no problem (as long as she was not in pain), so her body weight can be pushing on the baby without hurting her. So there is really no way your friend pushing with her hand like that would have hurt the baby.

We also had a bit of a scare with our daughters movements becoming smaller. The doctor told us that that is no concern, the thing that matters is whether or not there is movement, not how hard the movements are. The baby re-positions and that effects how hard the movements feel (or whether or not they produce firm lumps).

So, all of that is straight from our doctor as answers to our own questions. You really have nothing to worry about.


Back to top Use Dark theme