Crying
Cross-source consensus on Crying from 1 sources and 4 claims.
1 sources · 4 claims
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Highlighted claims
- Mean heart rate increased from 123 bpm at first cry to 168 bpm 30 seconds later. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- The first cry was associated with a steady rise in heart rate. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- Most newborns cried within the first 30 seconds after delivery. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)
- The study did not distinguish early crying from late crying, limiting interpretation of heart rate patterns in late-crying newborns. — Heart rate trends in healthy newborns ≥35+0 weeks’ gestation after caesarean delivery with extrauterine placental transfusion and physiology-based cord clamping: a Norwegian observational study (INTACT-3)