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  • Hey it's me Destin.

  • Welcome to Smarter Every Day. So today's episode's a little bit different. I have a question

  • about breathing. It's pretty simple. See our bags are packed and we're about to go to the

  • hospital to have our third child, and my question is this. How do you go from,

  • this. My baby, in my baby.

  • To this. Now 72 hours ago, my son was inside

  • my wife, and now he's not. He's no longer in a liquid environment, he is in

  • a gaseous environment. So something has to change, and in fact it's awesome.

  • To learn more about this let's go talk to somebody that's smarter than me.

  • Well, my wife could do it but she's tired. Goodnight -Goodnight.

  • Alright, so to figure out how babies go from living in a liquid

  • environment to an air environment we had to come to smart guy's house, so

  • we came to a doctor's house.

  • Spiral staircase, you know he's smart. So, let's go check him out.

  • Hey how's it going? -Hey Destin.

  • So this is Dr Schuster, and Dr Schuster

  • is, a baby delivery doctor we'll call you for the video.

  • -Alright So, he also plays music, so that lets you know that he's

  • really really smart. So we're gonna get some info from him.

  • [music]

  • OK so my question

  • is pretty simple. How do we go from breathing fluid inside

  • the mother's womb, to breathing air? -As the baby's coming out,

  • and gets squeezed as it's coming through the birth canal. All that fluid that's been in the lungs

  • which is the urine from the baby and the poop from the baby, I mean all the

  • bad stuff. Once they get squeezed that stuff comes out and that baby takes that very

  • first gasp, that gasp of, oxygen.

  • The thing that, that baby needs. That triggers huge changes in the circulation

  • of baby, and that's what allows everything to start working, the baby's breathing on it's own then.

  • So there's actually like a switch that's flipped or something when the baby

  • breathes for the first time? -A couple of valves that change the circulation, change the plumbing

  • if you will, in the heart. Really. So where are these valves

  • these valves are actually in the heart? -The top half of the heart, yeah. There's something

  • called the foramen ovale, which is just a big flap that sits between the right and left

  • atrium. It closes, once that baby gets that first little bit of oxygen, that

  • first breath. OK so that's pretty amazing. So the first time the baby takes a

  • breath, and that's why that first cry is so special, becase that's actually [clicks fingers]

  • the moment where the baby's, autonomous. -It's all breathing. Yeah it goes from

  • breathing it's own poop, to breathing real oxygen, the real nutrients that it needs

  • for life. Oh that's awesome. Thank you very much. -Any time. Glad to do it.

  • Alright, we got a little man.

  • Let's check him out. He's alive and well and his lungs are

  • working and he's breathing air. One thing that happened right when he came out

  • is, this right here. After he started squealing a little bit, I could hear

  • that [clicks fingers] change when he went from fluid to, air.

  • The nurse brought him over here and she stuck this tube down his throat,

  • and she starts sucking amniotic fluid. This little

  • guy started telling us what he though about everything. So check him out.

  • Get in there, see his face.

  • Mmmhmm.. That's what I'm talking about. Check this out.

  • It's an ultrasound from 5 months ago when he was still in the womb. This is real data.

  • If you look close you can see all four chambers of the heart.

  • If you look even closer you can see that little thing that Dr Schuster was talking about.

  • OK I didn't understand that so I had to get my wife to put it on engineering paper

  • so I could figure it out. So in your heart you have four chambers, and the

  • blood, as it exits the lungs, it goes through the heart and comes back to your body.

  • And after it exits your body, it goes back through the heart and then goes back

  • to the lungs. We all know this, but here's the deal with

  • the heart before the baby comes out of the womb. You have something here called the foramen

  • ovale, and you have here something called the ductus arteriosus. [newborn noises in background] I hear you.

  • buddy, hold on. So what's going on here is, before birth

  • the foramen ovale and the ductus arteriosus divert blood

  • from the lungs, so what that means is only about 7 percent of

  • the blood flow goes to the lungs. [infrant crying] Daddy's here, hold on.

  • So, basically, before birth the lungs are really really

  • small. They're not inflated, because the foramen ovale and the ductus arteriosus

  • which is right here, diverts that blood flow. So once it flips over,

  • the foramen ovale closes in about an hour, and the ductus arteriosus

  • goes away and becomes a ligament after about 5 days. I think this is really awesome.

  • You can see that the blood flow goes back to 100 percent for the lungs, and the..

  • Alright, I'll.. [baby crying] I can get him. You're getting Smarter Every Day.

  • The nurses are gone, so I started messing around with

  • their stuff. Woah.

  • Check that out. Alright. Now we turn on a super light.

  • This is , this is

  • active tracking. You asleep?

  • -Not any more. Just bear with me. Look at this, I found a magic wand.

  • What? Alright so watch this.

  • So, there's a big light spot, and if I hold the magic wand

  • at the light spot, and I start blinking away, the lights will follow

  • the magic wand. It tracks it.

  • So it's

  • actively tracking this bulb.

  • [ Captions by Andrew Jackson ]

  • Captioning in different languages welcome. Please contact Destin if you can help.

Hey it's me Destin.

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