Pose your questions on Ask, Answer, Learn to Dr. Greene and the DrGreene.com community.
What's going down your drain?
Set your TiVo to see Dr. Greene on the Dr. Oz Show. Tuesday, March 23rd. Check your local listing for show times in your area.
Dr. Greene will be chatting live for one hour on Thursday, March 25th at 10:00 a.m. PT (Noon CT) (1:00 p.m. ET). Click Here to chat with Dr. Greene

Dr. Greene, why was my baby born covered with meconium, and can this cause a urinary tract infection? Also, could this have been prevented by delivering the baby sooner, and not going past 40 weeks????? Help!
Kimberly, by the end of your fourth week of pregnancy, your little baby already had a beating heart. By eight weeks she had toes and elbows, eyelids and ear lobes -- she even had nipples. All of the organs and systems of her body had already formed, even before you began to "show."
As she floated tranquilly in your uterus, all of the nutrition she needed came to her through the soft pipeline that tethered her to you -- the umbilical cord. That same umbilical cord carried away the waste products generated by her growing body. She didn't need to eat, she didn't need to poop, but nevertheless, by the time you were only 10 or 11 weeks pregnant, she began swallowing and peeing.
Even though the umbilical cord handled the task of waste management, her tiny kidneys made urine as an important part of the amniotic fluid. Even though she received all of her nutrition directly from your blood via the umbilical cord, her own digestive tract needed to get ready to assume responsibility from the moment of her birth.
Swallowing helps facilitate the intricate development of the digestive tract. Taste buds are already mature by 12 weeks and seem to encourage babies' swallowing -- they like the taste of amniotic fluid. When a sweetener is added to the fluid, babies swallow even more. When a bitter substance is added, they swallow less. In any event, by term, most babies swallow up to 750 mL of amniotic fluid each day -- about the volume of a bottle of wine (Human Embryology and Developmental Biology, Mosby-Year Book, 1994).
We might think of amniotic fluid as pristine, clear water, but your growing baby was already making a mess. Old skin cells and hairs (which would become dust in the outside world) began to build up in the fluid. Unlike later in life, your daughter cleaned up her own mess. As soon as she began swallowing, she removed the debris from the fluid. This sludge began to accumulate in her intestines. Called meconium, this dark-green tarry substance is a mixture of hair, cells, enzymes, blood, mucus, and other secretions. By the time of your daughter's birth, the meconium had filled most of her intestines. Meconium is sterile -- very unlike the bacteria-filled stools that will follow.
Most babies pass the first meconium stool in the first 12 hours after birth. I love watching new dads trying to change a sticky meconium diaper. Often they end up with tarry meconium everywhere. Within a few days, the meconium stools give way to soft yellow-green breast milk stools or yellow-tan formula stools. If no meconium stool has been passed within the first 48 hours, the baby should be evaluated.
Some babies, about 10-15%, pass a meconium stool even before they are born (Nelson Textbook of Pediatrics, Saunders, 2007). This is a common response to fetal distress. Stress, especially decreased oxygen to the baby, causes the sphincter muscles to relax and stool to be pushed out. (It is possible to "scare the poop" out of a baby even before they are born). Non-stressed, healthy babies also sometimes pass stools before they are born.
Show full page
Thank you very much for the info!
The boys and I love to hang around in our 'jammas on the rare occasion that...
You might also be interested in the indepth report we have on site located...
Hi Dr. Greene,
From 5-7 yrs old I had multiple kidney infections and...