When examining the causes of the baby’s death in the womb, 3 separate factors should be mentioned.
- The baby itself
- Placenta
- The body of the expectant mother who gave the primary blood to the placenta
The most common cause is the baby itself. In other words, if the baby has a disability of its own, the mother’s body detects it and the chromosomes do not work. In this case, the pregnancy does not progress and results in miscarriage. The process before the miscarriage is when the baby’s heartbeat stops. This is the factor in most cases.
If the placenta is not well placed in the mother’s womb, that is, it does not fit well, then the ability to feed the baby is not very high. The baby may have developmental retardation, amniotic fluid may decrease, and the pregnancy is terminated if the developmental retardation is too early to result in birth.
The expectant mother should give the baby very clean blood. So the baby has kidneys, lungs, liver, but none of them work actively inside. This metabolic product, called dirty blood, is sent to the expectant mother and cleansed in the expectant mother’s blood. Then the clean blood is given to the baby. If there is any disease in the expectant, then the expectant mother will not be able to clear this blood and will lose the baby.
Other common causes are heart diseases in the mother, liver disease and autoimmune diseases. In autoimmune disease, the body alienated its own tissues. The best known is lupus disease. It is a very rare disease, but when it occurs, some stuffs form in the mother’s blood. Even their own tissues are foreign to the expectant mother. If pregnancy occurs during this period, it will break down the baby’s blood cells or other tissue cells, causing the baby to die.