Fetal Heartbeat Explained


Phase 1
Human life begins when a woman’s egg is fertilized by a man’s sperm. This process offertilization—also referred to as conception—usually happens in the fallopian tube and creates a single-celled human being known as a zygote. This new life starts growing right away, quickly dividing to become a multi-celled blastocyst that, within a week after conception, implants into the woman’s uterine lining. It also develops the placenta, which transfers nutrients and oxygen from the woman to the developing baby and helps clear the baby’s waste products back to the mother for elimination.
Phase 2
About 18-22 days after conception (or around 5-6 weeks into pregnancy), the human heart starts beating. At this stage, the tissues that will eventually become a fully formed heart start to pulse, creating heartbeats that can be detected by ultrasound.[1] The fetal heart is fully formed by the end of the tenth week of pregnancy.[2]
Phase 3
Phase 4

When does the fetal heart start to beat, and how is it detected or measured?
Why is a fetal heartbeat important?
What is an ultrasound and how is it performed?
- Confirming you’re pregnant
- Checking for ectopic pregnancy, molar pregnancy, miscarriage, or other early pregnancy issues.
- Determining your baby’s age and due date.
- Checking your baby’s growth, movement, and heart rate.
- Looking for multiple babies (twins, triplets, etc.).
- Examining your pelvic organs like your uterus, ovaries, and cervix.
- Checking the amount of amniotic fluid.
- Checking the location of the placenta.
- Checking your baby’s position in your uterus.
- Detecting problems with your baby’s organs, muscles, or bones.[10]
What are the different types of ultrasound scans? What is a Doppler ultrasound and when is it used?
Human life begins when a woman’s egg is fertilized by a man’s sperm. This process offertilization—also referred to as conception—usually happens in the fallopian tube and creates a single-celled human being known as a zygote. This new life starts growing right away, quickly dividing to become a multi-celled blastocyst that, within a week after conception, implants into the woman’s uterine lining. It also develops the placenta, which transfers nutrients and oxygen from the woman to the developing baby and helps clear the baby’s waste products back to the mother for elimination.
When does pregnancy begin and how long does it last?
What is the difference between an “embryo” and a “fetus”?
Now, about three weeks into pregnancy (or one week after conception), the blastocyst is called an embryo. This term is used until the end of the eighth week of pregnancy (six weeks after
From the start of week 9 of pregnancy until birth, the baby is called a fetus. During this time:
24In short, the difference between “embryo” and “fetus” is simply a matter of stages in a baby’s development before birth. “Embryo” and “fetus” refer to different stages in the life of a baby
What is the difference between “fetal age” and “gestational age”?
So, if you hear “6 weeks of fetal age” or “6 weeks after fertilization,” it means the baby has been growing for six weeks since conception.
This method helps determine when the pregnancy started and the estimated due date. Since fertilization usually happens about two weeks after the LMP, the pregnancy timeline includes these first two weeks. So, if a woman is said to be eleven weeks
In practical terms, when a woman says she is “9 weeks along” in her pregnancy, she’s talking about the gestational age of her fetus. Saying a woman is in her ninth week of pregnancy means it's been nine weeks since the first day of her LMP, and that the gestational age of her fetus is nine weeks as well.
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Additional Resources
[1] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/when-does-a-fetus-have-a-heartbeat.
[2] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/when-does-a-fetus-have-a-heartbeat.
[3] https://www.healthline.com/health/pregnancy/when-can-you-hear-babys-heartbeat#Baby-s-heartbeat.
[4] https://www.mayoclinic.org/healthy-lifestyle/pregnancy-week-by-week/in-depth/fetal-ultrasound/art-20546827.
[5] https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/when-does-a-fetus-have-a-heartbeat.
[6] https://lozierinstitute.org/the-science-behind-embryonic-heartbeats-a-fact-sheet/.