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Can sounds and bumps affect my unborn baby?

In your womb, how much can your unborn baby see, smell and feel? We’ve got the answers!

Posted: 21 April 2009
by Susan Lee
Orgasms, eating, music - how many of things you do can your unborn baby feel?

Even if we put an ear to someone’s tummy and hear all kinds of noisy gurgles and rumbles, we somehow imagine that a baby in the womb is in some peaceful haven. Far from it! So how do a growing baby’s senses respond to life on the inside?

Can my baby hear music in the womb?

“Babies start to respond noticeably to sound from about 20 weeks,” says Barbara Kott of the National Childbirth Trust (NCT). “They’re aware of noises inside the womb – your blood gushing, heart pumping and digestion working – as well as outside, such as music.”

Babies exposed to a soap opera theme tune in the womb reacted to the music two to four days after birth, while a control group made no response, a recent study found.

Does sunlight affect my unborn baby?

“Your baby will open her eyes at around 22 weeks,” says Kott. “At this stage her eyesight is still very limited, but she’ll be able to see the bright light of the sun as a warm glow if you strip off to catch the sun.

When people bump into me, does my baby feel the knocks inside my womb?

“Babies have a sense of touch and respond to being stimulated within the uterus from about 17 weeks, but your body is clever and protects your baby from bumps,” says Kott.

“You’ve got the membrane of the uterus itself, which is really strong. It goes from weighing 50g before you’re pregnant to nearly a kilogram by your due date, so the muscle becomes really thick. Plus you’ve got amniotic fluid, which cushions the baby.”

When I’m tired, is my unborn baby also feeling tired?

“We don’t know an awful lot about how your unborn baby feels, but as she gets her food and energy at the expense of you, she probably doesn’t feel as tired,” suggests Dr Olwen Wilson, a consultant child psychologist at the Royal Surrey County Hospital.

Expert Tip

Your unborn baby’s even more likely to respond if you go for a swim or have a bath. The water gives babies new buoyancy, which some of them respond to.

Barbara Kott, from the National Childbirth Trust

Even if your baby isn’t feeling tired when you are, she still likes to get her sleep time in. In the early months of your pregnancy, your baby sleeps nearly all the time.

Closer to birth, your baby’s sleep pattern is similar to that of a newborn, with dream sleep (REM – rapid eye movement) developing from around seven months.

Can my unborn baby taste what I eat?

Flavours from a your diet are transmitted to your baby while in the womb, a recent report by the Monell Chemical Senses research institute in Philadelphia claims.

Your unborn baby may even get a taste for spicy food, as the study found that pregnant women who drank a lot of carrot juice had children who were keener on carrots than those who hadn’t been given the juice. 

Mums’ stories

"My babies love Bryan Adams"

“I’m a big Bryan Adams fan. All my babies have jiggled around inside me when I’ve listened to his music. It was so useful when they were born: the quickest way to get any of them to sleep was to put on one of his CDs!”

Hattie, 34, mum to Greta, 10, James, 8, and Esther, 2

"My baby loved baths"

“I used to get in the bath with Mae, she’d splash water over my bump and Frankie would instantly start break-dancing inside.”

Katy, 41, mum to Mae, 3, and Frankie, 1

If you'd like info about pregnancy and birth delivered straight to your computer every week, check out the new Pregnancy Desktop from NHS Choices


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When I have an orgasm, does my baby feel it?

As far as we know, babies only seem to understand being comfortable or uncomfortable. But if there’s any pressure on them, they may respond to that. And if you have a surge of endorphins they may react, just as they might if you’re exercising or stressed and have a big rush of adrenalin. But we don’t know enough about our babies’ experiences to be sure,” says Sue McDonald of the Royal College of Midwives.

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