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 OB, lactation.
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...

Yeah I was going to mention that I thought they had like the highest c/s rate in the world.. was surprised they were hoping she'd do lady partsl.

I observed an IDDM, repeat c/s 38wk mom birth an almost 12lb baby for a childbirth educator program... his sugars were fine too... he was bigger than my 6wk old baby so it was weird to watch this newborn compared to mine at home. :) I couldn't imagine a 17lb one! Whoa baby!

I had 3 8+#er's vag with no medication and no problems. !2 yrs later #4 was a 8#12 oz 37 week breech so had a PCS (I was then almost 36). I thought I had a pretty good pain tolerance but I'd rather have a vag delivery everyday of the year then have another c/s. I had a spinal that I think wasn't quite enough. M/S PCA which didn't take away the pain really just made it so I couldn't say I was having pain then got Tyl #3 to come home one. I work L&D also. We now use Duramorph/Astromorph so maybe I'd do it again with one of those but I"m not going to take a chance and see if it makes it better. The weeks after getting over the surgery were awful. Maybe my age, maybe a few more pounds to start with 12 years later and not being in as good of shape as I was with the first 3. C/S's hurt.

It just goes to show you that everyone has a different experience. I was so sick with PIH with my first csection (all three were before duramorph was used in our dept), that by the time I got to my third, I could have walked from recovery. I would STILL take a c/s without duramorph over labor and delivery....Hands down..And I had to go back to work in seven weeks after my last one with a one year old and two year old at home...First section at age forty and last at forty three. Wasn't easy either way...

I researched the behavioral charactarisics of macrosomic infants for a paper in nursing school. Turns out they are harder to comfort and have more difficulty going between sleeping and waking. Also, they tend to like to be totally horizontal or totally vertical. Strange, huh?

Also, this probably doesn't apply to a mom who has 4 kids, but it can kind of alter the bonding process when the mom doesn't have a typical "newborn" - in a sense, robs them of the first few weeks where the baby is really tiny. Its also harder to get them on the breast.

I always told parents of big babies not to get frustrated if their child seems fussier than others. Luckily, the behavior charactaristics do not persist into adulthood! :chuckle

:balloons:

Specializes in ER, PED'S, NICU, CLINICAL M., ONCO..

I assisted a normal delivery of a big mother (non diabetic by the way) having a 5.700 grams baby. The neo/coordinator wanted to handle him in the rooming in. I said "shall I put this baby in the transport incubator and bring him to the nicu doc?"

After a while he said... OK do it.

This baby stayed about 30 days in the nicu afterwards.

My coos of the NICU refer to have assisted a son of a diabetic mother of 7.300 gr. Few years ago, who died accidentally some months later as a result of a mother's distraction in a bath tube.

:balloons: :rotfl: :p

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