how can a woman’s body be able to hold a baby inside without damaging her insides?

858 views

As far as I’m aware, the baby forms inside the womb but isnt the skin tightly covering all the organs and bones?

In: Biology

4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

Some things change while she is pregnant too. For example her abs will split down the middle and move towards the sides of her stomach. If somebody is particularly fit you can see it on their stomach.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The abdomen has [muscles](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/mxOajxO8mX0/maxresdefault.jpg) to “hold everything in”, and the skin and abdominal muscles CAN grow and stretch over the 9 month period to [accommodate](https://d2jmvrsizmvf4x.cloudfront.net/qLRoG2dWQOSyDba4zxf0_pregnancyorgansjpg.jpg) the baby’s size.

But pregnancies are not easy, and neither is the birth process, so in a lot of cases there are complications and unsuccessful pregnancies or deliveries.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It doesn’t.

Some people have “easy” pregnancies with limited long term effects. Most people don’t. In not unrare cases, the bones begin breaking inside of the body. Permanent bladder and sphincter damage is very common. Permanent pelvic floor damage is very common.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It is contained inside a flexible squishy bag, but sometimes the mother is damaged inside especially during the birth itself.