This is the PDF eBook version for Development of Normal Fetal Movements – The First 25 Weeks of Gestation By Alessandra Piontelli
Table of Contents
Introduction 1
1 General Movements 7
1.1 General Movements: 7-16 weeks 8
1.2 Length of the Feet and Epidermal Ridges 11
1.3 General Movements: 17-25 weeks 12
1.4 General Movements: Frequency and Duration 16
1.5 Central Pattern Generators 16
2 Startles, Twitches and Clonuses 19
2.1 Startles 19
2.2 Twitches 25
2.3 Clonuses 27
3 Hiccups, Yawning and Gasping 29
3.1 Hiccups 29
3.2 Yawning 33
3.3 Gasping 36
4 Fetal Breathing Movements 39
4.1 Fetal Breathing Movements: General Features 40
4.2 Fetal Breathing Movements: Non-Coincidence with other Behavioural Events 41
4.3 Apnoeic Pauses 42
4.4 Possible Functional Significance 44
4.5 Neurological Substrate 45
5 Swallowing, Sucking, and Handedness as Inferred from Fetal Thumb Sucking 49
5.1 Swallowing and Sucking: General Features 49
5.2 Swallowing: Development 50
5.3 Fetal Swallowing: Possible Functions 53
5.4 Swallowing: Possible Regulation 54
5.5 Handedness in the Human Fetus as Assessed by Thumb-Sucking 54
6 Localized Movements 59
6.1 Hand and Arm Movements 61
6.2 Leg Movements 71
7 Facial Expressions 77
7.1 Basic Emotions 78
7.2 Cross-Modal Integration 80
7.3 Preparing for Post-Natal Communications 82
7.4 Parental Reactions 83
7.5 Yawning: a Form of Communicating? 85
8 Rest-Activity Cycles, Clusters and the Ontogeny of Sleep 87
8.1 Sleep in Children 88
8.2 Behavioural States in Premature Infants and Mature Fetuses 88
8.3 Early Fetal Functioning: Rest-Activity Cycles and Clusters of Activities 89
8.3.1 Ontogeny of Sleep and its Possible Precursors 92
9 Twin Fetuses and Twin Myths 97
9.1 Beginnings of Intrapair Stimulation and its Relevance for Our Knowledge of the Sensory Capacities of All Fetuses 97
9.2 Features of Rest Cycles Revealed by Twins 99
9.3 Similarities and Differences 100
9.4 Behavioural Individuality 104
9.5 Universal Myths 104
9.6 Twins: Open to Mutual Communication 105
9.7 Maternal Emotions and their Impact on the Twin Fetus 105
9.8 Bereavement in the Twin Fetus 106
10 Conclusions. Movement is Life 107
10.1 Fetal Movements: Varied and Varying Functions 107
10.2 Shaping a Sense of our Boundaries 109
10.3 Building a Body Schema and a Proto-Sense of Self 110
10.4 Forming the Cortical Homunculus and its Curious Layout? 111
10.5 Building on Expressive Repertoire 112
Glossary 115
Subject Index 131