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Smiles, relief, congratulations and applause do
not begin when a child is born - they start when it cries. Without crying, the
room becomes increasingly silent and the mood increasingly apprehensive; and for
good reason - crying is a very positive sign of a new, healthy life; its absence
is anything but that. Many factors and complex interactions go into the
production of the sound that announces joyful, healthy childbirth.

Fetal Circulation (Figure 3)
Before birth, oxygenated blood from the placenta
flows into the child’s inferior vena cava and mixes with blood returning from
the lower part of the body. The atria are, in effect, one chamber due to the
open foramen ovale; however, laminar blood flow tends to supply the left atrium
and ventricle (and hence the upper body) with more placental (oxygenated) blood
than the right atrium receives. The ventricles also act as one and pump blood
around the body. Blood from the right ventricle bypasses the lungs, flowing
through the ductus arteriosus and joining blood from the left ventricle in the
descending aorta. A large portion of this blood flow goes to the placenta
through the umbilical arteries.
Although the pulmonary vessels are fully
developed in the fetus, only a tiny amount of blood (about 5% of cardiac output)
flows through them due to intense vasoconstriction of the pulmonary arterioles.
The nutritive blood supply to the lungs is from the bronchial arteries that
arise from the aorta. The collapsed alveoli (air sacs) are filled with amniotic
fluid.
Oxygenated blood is red, de-oxygenated blood is
blue, and at the moment of birth, a normal newborn is circulating a mixture of
blue and red blood. The color (lips and tongue) of a healthy newborn at birth is
a pinkish purple; the child has been this color for nine months and normal
placental function (cord pulsating) will maintain this color until the lungs
function.
When the lungs are functioning, the umbilical
vessels close, the ductus venosis closes, the hepatic portal vein is open, the
foramen ovale closes, the heart is two sided, the cardiac output from the right
ventricle (blue blood) goes through the lungs and is oxygenated, the left
ventricular output (red blood) goes through the body, the ductus arteriosus
closes, the pulmonary arterioles are open, the alveoli are full of air and the
child turns from purple to pink. All of this complicated process is coordinated
and controlled by the child’s reflexes; it usually happens within three or four
minutes of birth. What makes it happen?
All babies are born soaking wet, and on meeting
the atmosphere, the skin cools; this triggers two reflexes:
- The cold crying reflex - cold, wet diapers
produce the same result, crying.
- The cold pressor reflex - cold skin raises
blood pressure.
In order to cry, the child must first take a deep
breath, and an inspiratory "gasp" is often the first sign, triggered by cold,
that a child is going to cry or breathe. Contraction of the diaphragm and
intercostal muscles increase thoracic volume and create negative intra-thoracic
pressure. Once air is in the lungs, another reflex is triggered that relaxes the
pulmonary arterioles; this causes an enormous increase in pulmonary blood flow.
The cold pressor reflex increases the blood
pressure in the aorta, and this may be sufficient to reverse blood flow through
the ductus arteriosus causing more blood to flow through the lungs.
The cord is also cooling, and the cord is a
well-designed self-refrigerator. It has no skin and blubber to keep it warm like
the child. It contains only the cord vessels surrounded by a watery gel,
Wharton’s jelly, covered by a single layer of cells, the amnion. Water
evaporation cools it rapidly, causing the vessels, especially the muscular
arteries, to constrict; this further helps to raise systemic blood pressure and
to reverse ductus arteriosus flow.
At the same time, a large transfusion of
placental blood is being forced into the child by gravity and/or by uterine
contraction, greatly increasing cardiac output and pulmonary blood flow. The net
result of these changes is a large amount of blood flowing into the left atrium
from the lungs, which raises left atrial pressure and closes the foramen ovale -
the heart changes from one-sided to two-sided. The lungs are now oxygenating
blood that is pumped round the body by the left ventricle - the child turns
pink.
If the child has not taken the first breath, or
is depressed and cannot breathe, the massive increase in pulmonary blood flow
generated by the placental transfusion may, of itself, initiate ventilation.
Jaykka [1,2] showed that the fetal lungs are erectile tissues; by injecting
serum through the pulmonary artery of excised animal fetal lungs, the engorged
capillaries around the alveoli erected them and caused air to enter through the
trachea. With establishment of pulmonary blood flow, the high colloid osmotic
pressure of blood causes absorption of amniotic fluid from the alveoli and
"dries out" the lungs, filling the "erected" alveoli with air.
Cold will eventually cause the cord vessels to
close; however, a high arterial blood oxygen concentration is probably a key
factor in umbilical artery closure - they close before the umbilical vein
closes; it may also cause ductus arteriosus closure. After umbilical artery
closure, the placental transfusion may continue through the cord vein in a very
measured and controlled manner.
Figure 1 is a recording of a placental
transfusion [3] obtained by placing the newborn at the level of the placenta,
wrapped in a warm blanket, on a recording scales. It was obviously not a typical
birth - the cord pulsated for 19 minutes, the placental transfusion (cord
closure) was completed after 20 minutes, and the child started crying about ten
minutes after birth! This picture is worth many more than a thousand words.
During the first nine minutes, the vertical lines
(indicating newborn movement) on the recording are scant. The child, apart from
kicking the bed once (there was obviously no distress), was lying very still and
comfortable. There is no record of it breathing during this time, and the
thin-line tracing contrasts with the thick "activity" tracing after crying
started. Weight variation, influenced by uterine contractions, indicates that a
virtual tidal wave of placental blood flow was adequately oxygenating the child
in the absence of any obvious lung function. The warm blankets suppressed the
cold crying reflex for at least nine minutes.
Marked vertical "activity" lines occur at the
height of uterine contraction / transfusion peaks, and crying starts after one
of these. Figure 2 illustrates that the placental transfusion may be delivered
under very high pressure, and the activity lines (presumed discomfort) coincide
with high-pressure distension of the newborn liver. Pain causes crying; the
placental transfusion, by painfully distending the liver, may be a safe backup
for the cold crying reflex.

Figure 1. From Gunther M. The Transfer of Blood
Between the Baby and the Placenta. Lancet 1957;I:1277-1280.
After crying starts, there is one contraction
that injects nearly 100mls of blood into the child in less than one minute; the
arteries pump it back into the placenta over the next three minutes. At the peak
of this transfusion, not only is the liver, but also the vena cava, the heart,
the aorta and the pulmonary vessels are subjected to distension at arterial-like
pressure. If Jaykka’s type of alveolar erection and aeration ever occurred in
this child, it occurred during this uterine contraction. Thereafter, placental
transfusion was under strict reflexive control, proceeding in a stepwise manner.

Figure 2
If the patient had been in the natural squatting
position for this delivery, the child, instead of being placed at the level of
the placenta, would have been delivered downwards and would have been
immediately subjected to a placental transfusion pressure 30+ cms. of water at
birth due to gravity. Crying, (due to cold and liver pain) placental transfusion
and cord closure would probably all have been completed within a minute or two.
The physiological mechanism that produces the
"step" pattern is a sphincter-like closure of the umbilical vein that is
reflexively controlled to work as a pressure valve. The right atrium has pressor
receptors that are triggered by low central venous pressure; they control the
release of anti-diuretic hormone. A pressor receptor in the left atrium that is
triggered by adequate pressure to close the foramen ovale would be the ideal
receptor to effect closure of the umbilical vessels. Some cord pulsation was
recorded at this time, but blood flow in the arteries was insignificant as there
was no weight loss.
The first "step" indicates closure of the
umbilical vein, followed by some relaxation of the closure while the blood
volume increase is distributed throughout the child, but not enough relaxation
to allow central venous pressure to cause blood loss into the placenta. The
second uterine contraction "step" forces some blood volume past the relaxed
"pressure valve," triggering the final vein closure after the child has attained
a maximal/optimal blood volume needed for healthy survival.
Dr. Gunther [3] recorded many similar "stepwise"
placental transfusions; most were completed within three or four minutes. With
an actively crying child and maximum gravity drainage (the child held well below
the level of the placenta) the placental transfusion may be completed within 30
seconds.[4]
This reflexive closure of the umbilical vessels
(arteries and vein) occurs in the portions of the vessels INSIDE the child’s
abdomen. The blind remnants of these vessels become the two umbilical ligaments
and the ligamentum teres of the liver in the adult. When natural cord closure is
complete, the cord may be cut within a few inches of the umbilicus without
clamping (this occurs routinely in every mammal except humans); no blood loss
occurs from the child, but warm blood usually drains readily from the placental
portion of the umbilical vein, indicating that additional placental transfusion
was available if it had been needed. By this time, the umbilical arteries are
constricted and empty.
The massive increase in blood volume from
placental transfusion is soon decreased by hemo-concentration as fluid is
transferred into the tissues; the hematocrit value rises, as does the albumin
concentration. This increases plasma colloid osmotic pressure and keeps the
lungs dry. Crying also keeps lungs dry by increasing alveolar air pressure. The
normal weight loss that occurs after birth is mainly due to fluid being excreted
through the kidneys; wet diapers soon after birth indicate that the child
received a healthy placental transfusion.
As mentioned previously, cold, wet diapers
trigger the cold, crying reflex. Mothers are not devoid of reflexes, and crying
triggers the "baby pick-up" reflex. Crying babies don’t stay cold very long.
Babies also cry because they are hungry, and mothers respond accordingly. The
natural result of a crying child at birth should be its mother holding it while
it is still attached to the placenta. In this situation, another maternal reflex
is often demonstrated.
It is common practice nowadays for the cord to be
doubly clamped while the child is on the mother’s abdomen and the scissors are
handed to the parents to complete the job. Most mothers refuse, leaving it to
the husband; some mothers recoil in horror, and if the cord is left intact, most
mothers will not touch it. If they do, and especially if it is pulsating, the
cord is treated as gently and tenderly as is a tiny finger or an ear of the
child. New mothers are strongly inhibited from damaging the cord.
There are other stimuli that make a child
breathe, and the most potent is asphyxia. The build up of carbon dioxide during
asphyxia forces inspiratory efforts before oxygen lack becomes dangerous - try
holding your breath for two minutes. Asphyxia is not a physiological state, it
is pathological and pathogenic; it does not occur in normal childbirth. Clamping
a cord before the child is breathing will cause asphyxia and may force the child
to breathe. Without placental transfusion, the child may breathe with lungs that
have little blood flowing through them; such breathing will not reverse the
asphyxia.
Some babies are born asphyxiated due to cord
compression during birth, and are depressed to the extent that they do not
respond to pain or cold or carbon dioxide. If the cord compression is relieved
at birth, placental transfusion and placental oxygenation may correct the
asphyxia and eventually restore the depressed reflexes. If the cord compression
is not relieved at birth, but is maximized with a cord clamp, the consequences
may be fatal. Artificial ventilation / resuscitation should always be conducted
with the placental circulation intact. [5]
All of the complex mechanisms in the changeover
from placental oxygenation to pulmonary oxygenation have been programmed over
millions of years into the human genome by natural selection to promote optimal
survival and to prevent and to relieve birth asphyxia. The primate brain is very
large and very susceptible to permanent hypoxic damage; to ensure optimal
survival of the individual, and of the primate order, natural closure of the
umbilical cord must routinely provide perfect continuous oxygenation of the
brain and routinely leave the newborn in optimal condition for survival.
Disruption of the process with a cord clamp routinely harms the child.[6]
Use of Darwinian concepts and principles is not
intended to cause dispute with Creationist convictions. Evolution provides a
rational explanation of how variations in anatomy and physiology support life,
[7] and why a fetus thrives in water without lungs, and with a fish-like heart,
then changes within minutes into a crying, air-breathing mammal. A large,
fragile brain distinguishes human (and primate) life, and a near perfect, innate
mechanism to protect the brain during childbirth is essential for the continued
existence of human life.
Dr. Crick, of double helix fame, once was
reportedly asked how evolution could create anything as complex and brilliant as
the human brain. He replied:
"Evolution is much more intelligent than you
are."
A new mother’s reflexes that inhibit her from
damaging the newborn’s cord are much more sensible than a doctor wielding a cord
clamp.
Something very intelligent designed the switch
from placental to pulmonary respiration that makes a newborn baby cry, a
creative work that is quite exquisite and marvelous regardless of one’s
convictions about the nature of its Creator. That intelligence should be held in
humble respect by evolutionists and creationists alike. It contrasts sharply
with the ignorance and crass arrogance of those who would put a clamp on a
pulsating umbilical cord.
G. M.
Morley MB ChB FACOG (morley@cordclamping.com)
References:
- Jaykka S. Capillary Erection and Lung
Expansion. Acta Paediatr. 1965 [nppl] 109.
- Jaykka S. An experimental study of the
effect of liquid pressure applied to the capillary network of excised fetal
lungs, Acta Paediatr. 1957; Supp 112:2-91.
- Gunther M. The transfer of blood between
the baby and the placenta in the minutes after birth. Lancet 1957;I:1277-1280.
- Yao AC, Lind J. Effect of gravity on
placental transfusion. Lancet, 1969; II:505-508
- Peltonen T. Placental Transfusion,
Advantage - Disadvantage. Eur J Pediatr. 1981;137:141-146
- "Another thing very injurious to the
child, is the tying and cutting of the navel string too soon; which should
always be left till the child has not only repeatedly breathed but till all
pulsation in the cord ceases. As otherwise the child is much weaker than it
ought to be, a portion of the blood being left in the placenta, which ought to
have been in the child." Erasmus Darwin, Zoonomia,
1801
- Charles Darwin M.A. On the Origin of Species
by Means of Natural Selection. London: John Murray, Albermarle Street, 1859.
- Windle W. Brain Damage by Asphyxia at
Birth. Scientific American. 1969 Oct;221(4):76-84.
Addendum:
Most of this article may be referenced in
textbooks; many of the other details may be verified by carefully watching a
physiological delivery performed by the mother. I have had several similar
papers refused publication by the peer review press because of lack of data -
the only specific data I have to offer is 40 years of obstetrical experience
watching many newborns close their own cords, and watching other babies be
snatched away to a resuscitation table past the outstretched arms and agonized
face of a mother.
This study has few references on third-stage
physiology because Gunther’s paper [3] is the only valid scientific human study
that I know of that has ever been published. In all other papers, and there are
thousands of them, physiology has been disrupted with a cord clamp. None of
these "cord clamp" papers has a physiological control set of newborns whose
cords were not clamped and they are, therefore, scientifically invalid. "Late"
clamping at five minutes may be claimed to be "physiological," but on viewing
Gunther’s included tracing, clamping at 5 minutes would have destroyed placental
transfusion in that particular case; cord physiology does not obey the clock, it
is controlled by other parameters.
Newborn birth defects such as RDS and hypoxic,
ischemic brain damage do not occur naturally in other primates and this, some
may argue, is due to other primates not resuscitating their offspring. However,
these defects do occur in other primates when placental oxygenation and
placental transfusion are artificially interrupted at birth and many of the
neonates need resuscitation to survive. [8]
The highly advanced scientific obstetrical
community and its peer reviewers have no available data on babies that close
their cords physiologically; most members regard the cord clamp as a normal
newborn appendage and think that placental transfusion is harmful. However, the
same type of data that was used by Charles Darwin [5] in his publication is
available - billions of successful, healthy births that occurred before the cord
tie was ever thought of. Physiology is not harmful.
Obstetrical academia has massive amounts of data
in the thousands of research papers on RDS, CP, neurological impairment,
hyperviscosity, polycythemia and many other human newborn afflictions, real and
imagined; all the thousands (millions?) of these afflicted newborns have one
piece of data in common - all had their cords clamped. The profession, with all
its data, has yet to prove, or supply a scrap of evidence, that the cord clamp
does anything other than injure the newborn.
Copyright
G. M. Morley, April 11, 2002
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