Pregnancy Timeline
month
1st Trimester
2nd Trimester
3rd Trimester
01
02
03
04
05
06
07
08
09
10
Understanding Cord Blood
Share
Facebook
Newsvine
Delicious
Furl
Reddit
Digg
Google
Stumble Upon
Magnolia
Live
Yahoo
My Space

Rating

Please Login

Views

You rated this video with stars!
Please Login or Register in for your rating to matter!

Free Cord Blood Info Packet From AlphaCord!

Collecting Cord Blood offers a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to obtain stem cells. Freezing these cells provides a form of "Life Insurance" for your child and your extended family.

No thanks. Please don't show this offer again.

COMMENTS

lupita on 07/22/09 (121 days ago)reply

yay im almost due, im 36 weekes & 4 days...


Please or Register
JOANNA on 04/01/09 (233 days ago)reply

THIS VIDEO HELP ALOT LEARNING ABOUT OUR BABY


Please or Register

Posting Comment, Please Wait


Please or Register
Commenting Policy
     Video Description     

Umbilical cord blood has many of the same properties as a stem cell, and could save your baby's life. That's why many pregnant women decide during pregnancy to use "cord blood banking" facilities, and harvest their umbilical blood after giving birth.

......
Labor & Delivery

......

If you’re pregnant, you’ve no doubt begun to hear a lot about cord blood. Here are the basics. First, the facts. After a baby is born and the umbilical cord is cut, some blood remains in the vessels of the baby’s placenta and the cord attached to it. This is known as cord, or placental, blood. Cord blood has all the elements of normal blood, plus a rich supply of hematopoietic, or blood-forming, stem cells. These are similar to the cells found in bone marrow. For this reason, cord blood is increasingly replacing bone marrow in stem cell experimentation. In addition, cord blood transfers can be used to treat and improve some pediatric cancers and blood disorders. Today, cord blood can only be transplanted from a donor into a recipient who is a match.  This is similar to how a bone marrow transplant works, although cord blood transplants use less stringent matching criteria. The cord blood from a baby will also have a high likelihood of matching with the baby’s parents and any of the baby’s siblings, so the benefits of familial cord blood extend beyond the donor. As of today, only a few illnesses can be treated with cord blood, so it is statistically unlikely that any individual will need the use of his or her cord blood. But because stem cell research is always evolving, many people believe that cord blood will have even more uses in the future.

Click For More