17 lb baby!

Specialties Ob/Gyn

Published

MSNBC News Services

Updated: 11:42 a.m. ET Jan. 20, 2005A woman in Brazil gave birth Wednesday to a boy that doctors have nicknamed "giant baby." The infant weighs 17 pounds, about the average size of a six-month-old. He was delivered by Caesarean section.

The boy's 38-year-old mother is diabetic, a condition which can commonly cause women to give birth to larger babies. The boy, named Ademilton dos Santos, is receiving oxygen due to breathing problems and is being given an intravenous glucose solution to maintain a safe blood sugar level.

The director of the hospital in Cajazeiras, an area in north eastern Brazil, said the boy is otherwise in good health. Doctors say the mother Francisca Ramos dos Santos is feeling well after her surgery.

The boy's father and four sibilings were reportedly surprised at the news.

He is the heaviest baby ever born in Brazil, according to Brazilian medical officials.

If you click on the link you can see the pic of the baby.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6847721/?GT1=6065

Can you imagine. :eek:

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.
Imagine the drop in his glucose post-birth! .

yea that was my first thought. I bet his glucoses fell well into the 10s or even less.

I've never delivered a baby lady partslly, so I just have a question for those of you who have without pain relief...

It's all so dang painful, does a 10 lb. baby really hurt all the more than a 6 lb. baby? I suppose the aftermath the next day and such might be more painful with a bigger baby but when it's actually happening isn't it all so painful that it hurts a lot either way?

Good question.. Anyone? I had a c section and 2 VBACs. All my kids were around 6 lbs. It hurt? Does big mean more pain? Maybe bigger tears or episiotomy?

He does have the look, but the really big IDMers usually have a more squished up fat face than that. Then again, you can't really see his face. I bet he has hairy ears though!

:rotfl: I thought only I noticed that! I call them, "Monchichi"

From what I remember, bigger wasn't more painful. But then we forget the pain after the delivery:chuckle .

I just remember lots of people looking at him in the nursery, would you believe he was in an incubator for the first 10hours of his life, next to a 2 pounder who was awaiting transfer to an NICU at a nearby hospital. I just remember thinking he looked like a turkey (back then they put babies on their tummies) with his bum in the air. And nope, newborn diapers didn't fit him.....

I had a small laceration but no stitches and it was a four hour labour, much better than earlier experiences

But every birth is different. But I come from two families with large birth weight and none of us ever had gestational diabetes, on my Dad's side anybody under 8lbs is considered small... My nephew was three weeks early and was just under 7lbs.

Specializes in Specializes in L/D, newborn, GYN, LTC, Dialysis.

I can only think "bigger" could be more painful if you are dealing with problems w/the "passenger" coming out (dystocias, tearing etc.). Jmo. But those CAN occur w/smaller babies, as well. Bigger does NOT always mean "more pain". Just depends on the situation.

Specializes in LTC, assisted living, med-surg, psych.

Oh, I don't know........my first baby, delivered lady partslly, was 9-11, and I had an episiotomy and still tore (OUCH). The pain was a 12/10 on the pain scale, and I received Demerol AND two paracervical blocks. On top of that, I popped out several large hemorrhoids during the birth, and then I had to SIT on all of this! :o Thank God for my DH's grandma's rubber donut......then I couldn't pee because I was too swollen inside, and they had to cath me.

Not a great way to begin motherhood. :uhoh3:

Fast-forward six years to when my 'runt', the 8-2 baby, was born. This time I didn't take so much as a Tylenol during the whole labor, didn't tear, and even the hemorrhoids were smaller. Plus, I was able to void within an hour after his birth, so no catheter, and I was up and ambulating to the nursery two hours later. Easier? Yes. Less painful? HELL yes!! :chuckle

Well when i was having my baby (8.14 1 week late by the way) I was waiting to dilate to 10 and i could hear the woman next door screaming bloody murder! This being my first and only baby i was getting MIGHTY nervous hearing all that going on. Well when my baby was born she had to go to the nursery for a week for some temp/resp problems and there was a HUGE baby in there. Found out it was the the screaming moms baby and he was born at 11llbs 10 oz! I didn't hear anyone else screaming that way with the "smaller" babies...

Specializes in NICU, PICU, educator.

Whooohoooo.....I can't even imagine...heck I almost had to have plastic surgery after a 7lber! Dang...how would you like to put an IV in that kid...no thanks!

:chuckle Why is it that those kids have hairy ears? Some of those kids need some gel to slick it back LOL

I would like to know what the biggest baby delivered lady partslly weighed. I just saw some history show which mentioned a woman in Russia in the seventeen hundreds who gave birth to significant numbers of twin, triplet and quadruplet babies to total sixty nine children over forty years....Amazing...Not long ago we had a really busy time when we had to double up people and there was a primip who had an epis (rare for us) with a six pound five ounce child, rooming in with a multip who had an 11 lb 11 ounce child over an intact perineum. It hurts to even think about that....

Specializes in NICU.

I noticed that the chunk wasn't wearing any cardiac leads, or a sat monitor. Considering the potential for a cardiac problem with a huge sugar baby, I hope he gets checked out!

Poor mom!

I have seen an 11 lb. 6 oz. SVD baby and a 13 lb 4 oz. C/S baby (absolutely HUGE). My three were quite puny by comparison 6-3, 6-15, and 6-11 and I am quite happy. I think these days w/ litigation, if the docs see major macrosomia, they are encouraging/offerring a C/S for fear of shoulder dystocia and brachial plexus injury/hypoxia. The 17 lb'ers mom must have had her diaphragm touching her tonsils. How uncomfortable. YIKES!

In Brazil , csections are on demand....I have had more than one Brazilian patient be shocked at not being able to have a csection vs a lady partsl delivery. That is because they often want to avoid "disappointing" their husbands in the pleasure department afterwards, or so I have been told by several lovely Brazilian ladies and upset husbands...

+ Add a Comment