35 weeks pregnant

Find out what to expect from every week of your pregnancy.

Calcium

Make sure you’re getting enough of this natural inner Armour.

Keeping healthy

Learn how to stay active safely throughout your pregnancy.

Exercise

Keep up your normal daily physical activity or exercise (sport, yoga, dancing, or even walking to the shops and back) for as long as you feel comfortable. Exercise is not dangerous for your baby.

Vitamin D

Discover the role Vitamin D plays in your baby’s development.

Grow, baby, grow

Your baby is nearly ready to be born and is growing fast. Your body is under increasing demands and, at 35 weeks pregnant, you may find you have a tendency to become constipated. Enriching your balanced diet with more fibre should help maintain a normal bowel function.

Nearly ready for birth

By week 35 of your pregnancy, your baby weighs approximately 5.5lbs, although this is just an estimate. Babies vary widely in size and weight at this stage and even an ultrasound can only give a range, rather than an exact figure.

One certainty is that your growing baby now has less space to move around. From their curled up foetal position with their legs drawn into their chest, they can still squirm and shift around, and you may be able to see their movements on the surface of your bump.

Your placenta has also grown and at week 35 weighs around 1.2lbs. This is over a quarter of the weight of your baby and roughly a sixth of your baby’s eventual birth weight.

Internally, your baby’s lungs are fully formed and ready for breathing, and their central nervous system is becoming more mature1. Now able to suckle for feeds, their digestive system is also almost ready for life outside the womb.

  • By week 35, your body is already preparing to feed your baby after birth by producing colostrum.

Your body is also getting prepared, with milk production already under way. You may notice an occasional leak of colostrum – the nutritious first milk – from your breasts as you get closer to your due date.

The fibre of life: Maintaining healthy bowel function

Your baby is getting much bigger now that you’re 35 weeks pregnant, as is your bump, and you may find that you have a tendency to become constipated in this late stage of pregnancy.

Including fibre-rich foods in your diet can help to maintain healthy bowel function, with different types of fibres having different functions in your digestive system. As a general rule soluble fibres can be fermented in the gut, while insoluble fibre is passed through whole. Gradually increasing your intake of both types of fibre should help maintain healthy bowel function for the rest of your pregnancy.

  • Gradually increasing your intake of both types of fibre should help maintain healthy bowel function in pregnancy.

Remember to drink plenty of water, and try doing some light exercise such as walking or yoga. Certain iron supplements may cause constipation so if you’re taking one, ask your healthcare professional if there’s another one you can try.

Next steps

Fibre is only found in foods derived from plants. Soluble and insoluble fibres are often found together in foods so eating a variety of fibre-rich foods will provide a good mix of both types.

Try some of the following fibre-rich food swaps to increase your fibre intake:

  • Mashed potato swap to jacket potato
  • Orange juice swap to whole orange
  • Vegetable soup swap to vegetable and bean soup
  • Chicken curry and rice swap to chicken and lentil curry with brown rice