Hormones During the First Trimester of Pregnancy

by Dr. Gerard M. DiLeo

Over the next nine months you're in for a wild time! If pregnancy were an amusement park ride it might start off as the merry-go-round. By the second trimester you're on the tilt-a-whirl, and by the third trimester you're riding the big coaster! Fortunately, since pregnancy takes nine months, you'll have some time to get used to all of the ups and downs. What exactly are these hormones doing inside your body?

Estrogen, progesterone, hCG, hPL, and prolactin are the major pregnancy hormones. Thyroid and adrenal hormones from both you and your baby also play roles. Let's take a look at the five big players.

Estrogen

Estrogen is a female hormone produced in the ovaries. During your menstrual cycle, estrogen and progesterone levels cycle up and down, falling to their lowest levels while you are menstruating. Estrogen and progesterone stimulate the endometrium to support a fertilized egg if pregnancy occurs. During the first trimester, estrogen production is mostly made by the placenta, and this continues until near the end of the pregnancy when the amount circulating in your body is a thousand times the amount you have when not pregnant.

By improving the blood supply, estrogen makes everything grow. Breasts enlarge, moles and skin tags get bigger, spider veins become more prominent, and blood vessel beds become swollen and engorged.

Progesterone

Unlike estrogen, which is manufactured by the placenta, progesterone comes from the cholesterol connection in your own blood. Progesterone is a potent anti-inflammatory, which may help to blunt your immune system so you won't reject your baby. It is also a smooth muscle relaxant, which can slow gastric emptying, giving you heartburn and acid reflux, and decreasing the tone of your bowels, leading to constipation. More bad news: it also increases the oiliness of your skin, so if you're the fairest in all the land, you'll be shocked to see that first zit in five years rear its ugly little head. Additionally, progesterone's relaxant properties may play a role in keeping your uterus from contracting until term.

Together, estrogen and progesterone help control the onset of breast milk, keeping the floodgates closed by inhibiting the breasts' response to the hormone prolactin. Estrogen and progesterone levels plunge at the time of delivery, allowing prolactin to stimulate the breasts' milk flow.

from beyond babyzone:
Use a Facebook account to add a comment, subject to Facebook's Terms of Service and Privacy Policy. Your Facebook name, profile photo and other personal information you make public on Facebook (e.g., school, work, current city, age) will appear with your comment. Comments, together with personal information accompanying them, may be used on BabyZone.com and other Disney media platforms. Learn More.
All the pregnancy info you need—from the first trimester to the last.
Look Who's Talking New
in BabyZone Community
X

more in BabyZone

10 Excitingly Exotic Baby Names
fetal development week 22

Enter your due date Don't know?
don't show this again

Your Pregnancy Newsletter X

fetal development week 22

Enter your due date Don't know?