As the saying goes: It’s easy to have a big butt. Is it really easy to have a big butt? Women with plump buttocks may not have a good childbirth because excess fat and soft tissue around the pelvis will compress and interfere with the birth process, which is not conducive to normal delivery. So what factors determine the difficulty of production?
1. Are buttocks really good and healthy?
Is it really good to have a big butt? Doudou’s mother said: Childbirth is a complex subject that tests the mother’s self-confidence and the doctor’s clinical experience. Mother\’s big butt alone cannot guarantee a smooth delivery.
2. Big buttocks = large external pelvic structure
The buttocks are covered with bones and soft tissue of the pelvis: the bone tissue is what we often call bones, and the soft tissue is fat. As for the big butt that people see with the naked eye, is it because of the large passage (the entrance and exit of the pelvis) that the fetus must pass through during delivery, or is it because of fat hypertrophy? If it is because of thick fat, it is not conducive to natural childbirth and may even have a negative impact.
Type of pelvis
Because the female pelvis and the planes of each pelvis vary greatly, it is impossible to strictly classify the pelvises. For practical needs, according to the shape of the pelvic entrance, we can divide the pelvis into:
1. Women\’s style, that is, round or horizontal oval. 2.Men\’s style, i.e. heart shape or wedge shape. 3. Ape style, which is long and oval in front and back. 4. Flat type, that is, horizontal oval shape, but the front and rear diameter is very short. The impact of these four pelvises on childbirth is that \”women\’s\” and \”ape\” are more conducive to childbirth. Both the \”yang\” and \”flat\” styles are not conducive to vaginal delivery. Of course, the shape of the pelvis is invisible to the naked eye, and the idea that big butts make it easier to have children is just speculation.
4. You can measure the size of your pelvis yourself
The pelvis consists of the sacrum, coccyx, and two hip bones (which are formed by the fusion of the ilium, ischium, and pubis). Want to know how big your pelvis is?
Doudou’s mother tells you how to measure your pelvis yourself: Put your hands down on your hips, and you can feel some curved bones on both sides of the body, which are the iliac bones; go down to the place commonly known as the tailbone, which is the coccyx; the part below the waist and above the coccyx That\’s the sacrum; then touch the pubic bone above the perineum; and finally, when we sit down, the bone that sticks out when we sit down is the ischium. The part touched above is probably the entire pelvis.
So, what is the relationship between smooth delivery and natural childbirth? The pelvis is just one important factor in childbirth. Others such as labor force, maternal psychological state, uterine contraction status, fetal size, delivery posture, etc. are all key. Among them, factors such as labor force, birth canal, fetus, and labor pain are particularly important.
5. Productivity
The force that forces the fetus and its appendages out of the womb is called productivity. Production force includes uterine contractility (referred to as uterine contractility), abdominal muscle and diaphragm contractility (collectively referred to as abdominal pressure), and levator ani muscle contractility. 1. Uterine contractions occur after deliveryThe main production force throughout the entire delivery process. Postpartum uterine contractions can force the cervical canal to shorten until it disappears, the cervix dilates, the fetal presentation decreases, and the placenta and fetal membranes are delivered.
2. The contraction force of the abdominal muscles and protruding muscles The contractility (abdominal pressure) of the abdominal wall muscles and diaphragm muscles is an important auxiliary force for the delivery of the fetus in the second stage of labor. 3. The contractility of the levator ani muscle The contractility of the levator ani muscle can assist the fetus in internal rotation of the pelvis. When the occipital part of the fetal head is exposed under the pubic arch, it can assist in tilting the fetal head back and delivering the baby. After the fetus is delivered, when the placenta descends into the vagina, the contraction of the levator ani muscle helps the placenta to be delivered.