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ing to a study published in the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, most women (59 percent) experienced an onset of pregnancy symptoms by their fifth or sixth week, while 71 percent reported symptoms by the end of week six and 89 percent by week eight. If you dont feel any symptoms at all, dont worry!
The 40 weeks of a full-term pregnancy can be further broken down into three trimesters: First trimester: 3.5 months or 14 weeks. Second trimester: 3.5 months or 14 weeks. Third trimester is: 3 months or 12 weeks.
Your body Tender, swollen breasts. Soon after you become pregnant, hormonal changes might make your breasts sensitive or sore. Upset stomach with or without vomiting. Feeling like vomiting during pregnancy is known as morning sickness. More urination. Fatigue. Food cravings and dislikes. Heartburn. Constipation.
Week 12: Your baby should start to move, but you probably wont be able to feel anything because the baby is still so small. Week 16: Some pregnant women will start to feel tiny butterfly-like flutters. The feeling might just be gas, or it might be the baby moving.
First trimester. The first trimester will span from conception to 12 weeks. This is generally the first three months of pregnancy. During this trimester, the fertilized egg will change from a small grouping of cells to a fetus that begins to have human features.

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Sore and enlarged breasts, increased vaginal discharge, morning sickness, and exhaustion may not be the most pleasant pregnancy symptoms to experience, but they are each signs of a healthy pregnancy. Talk to your doctor for tips and advice on how to manage symptoms that are particularly difficult.
In the first trimester: You feel tired and possibly nauseous (like vomiting). You gain 1 or 2 kilograms, or maybe less if you have morning sickness. Most of this weight is in the placenta (which feeds your baby), your breasts, your uterus (womb) and the extra blood that you are making.
The embryo looks like a tadpole. The neural tube (which becomes the brain and spinal cord), the digestive system, and the heart and circulatory system begin to form. The beginnings of the eyes and ears are developing. Tiny limb buds appear, which will develop into arms and legs.

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