Erythroblastosis Fetus

Erythroblastic blastocytosis fetalis (erythroblastic blastocyst from an embryo) or erythroblastic disorder fetalis is a rare disease that can cause large numbers of red blood cells (blood cells) to appear in the blood of mothers and fetuses during fetal development.

About 1 in 250 to 600 pregnancies worldwide are affected by this disease. Symptoms may appear as early as 24 weeks of pregnancy and continue through labor and delivery. The most common symptom that people observe is neonatal jaundice immediately after birth.

In other cases, the characteristic symptoms of the disease in the child himself may appear sooner or later. Jaundice is the most common or its first degree of severity. Another parasymptom is the large volume and unnatural red color of the umbilical cord, even blue. The third degree occurs when the baby’s hemoglobin level decreases too much. The baby develops shortness of breath and does not receive enough nutrients through the umbilical cord. Doctors may have to resort to gastric lavage at the beginning or immediately after labor (whatever that may be) to remove drops of blood instead of caring for the baby as usual. The child grows very slowly and becomes susceptible to diseases for which he is not yet adapted. Future mother