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The married woman's private medical companion

Chapter 24: CONCEPTION.
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About This Book

A practical medical handbook provides plain-language guidance for reproductive and maternal health, explaining menstrual physiology and common disorders with their causes, symptoms, and treatments. It outlines how pregnancy may be recognized, common ailments and discomforts during gestation, complications of labor, and both natural and assisted delivery techniques, together with postpartum care and nursing. The manual addresses miscarriage and abortion, distinguishing causes, risks, prevention, and when intervention is considered, and examines sterility, its possible origins, and available remedies. It also discusses methods proposed to prevent conception, attendant moral and practical considerations, and practical advice for infant care and management.

CONCEPTION;
OR,
PREGNANCY.

CONCEPTION.

In order to procreate the human species, there is a periodical discharge of blood from the vagina of every female, termed the catamenia, or menses. The secretion of this fluid commences at that period of life termed puberty, which occurs at different ages, according to the climate. In some latitudes it commences as early as eight or ten, and in others not until fifteen. As soon as conception or pregnancy commences, this discharge ceases, and goes to support the fœtus, or the child.

The manner in which conception takes place has ever been a fruitful subject of inquiry, but we are unable to account for this change precisely. It is, however, pretty evident that the semen of the male is introduced into the uterus, while the semen of the female is discharged from the ovaria by means of the Fallopian tubes, the fimbricated extremity of which closely embraces that organ.

These tubes, by a kind of peristaltic motion similar to the intestines, convey the semen of the female into the uterus, where it unites with the semen of the male; and it is these united fluids which constitute the rudiment of the fœtus, and which often give to the child the appearance and dispositions of their parents. Sometimes one trait is inherited, sometimes another; at other times a new compound or character is formed (like a chemical union), which does not partake of the nature of either of the former.