Meconium

Meconium
Meconium from 12-hour-old newborn – the baby's third bowel movement

Scale: 5 cm left to right.
SpecialtyPediatrics

Meconium is the earliest stool of a mammalian infant resulting from defecation. Unlike later feces, meconium is composed of materials ingested during the time the infant spends in the uterus: intestinal epithelial cells, lanugo, mucus, amniotic fluid, bile, and water. Meconium, unlike later feces, is viscous and sticky like tar – its color usually being a very dark olive green and it is almost odorless.[1] When diluted in amniotic fluid, it may appear in various shades of green, brown, or yellow. It should be completely passed by the end of the first few days after birth, with the stools progressing toward yellow (digested milk).

  1. ^ Persis Mary Hamilton, Basic Pediatric Nursing (Maryland Heights MO: Mosby, 1991), 82. ISBN 978-0801658693

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