Umbilical Cord Symptoms (2024)

Is this your child's symptom?

  • Umbilical cord or navel questions about newborns
  • The navel is also called the belly button or umbilicus

Symptoms

  • Umbilicus (navel) has a cloudy discharge or even some dried pus on the surface
  • Bleeding occurs from cord's point of separation
  • Separation of cord is delayed past 3 weeks

Omphalitis: Serious Complication

  • Definition. Bacterial infection of the umbilical stump with spread to the skin around it. It's a medical emergency.
  • How Often. 1 out of 200 newborns.
  • Symptoms. Redness spreads around the navel. The area may be tender, swollen and have a foul odor.

Umbilical Granuloma: Minor Complication

  • Definition. Small round growth in center of navel after the cord falls off. It's red. Covered with clear mucus. Not dry like normal skin.
  • How Often. 1 out of 500 newborns.
  • Outcome. Usually grows in size if not treated. Can become an entry point for umbilical infections.
  • Treatment. Easily treated in the doctor's office by putting on a chemical called silver nitrate.

Dry Cord Care or Alcohol Cord Care

  • The AAP and ACOG both advise dry cord care (natural drying). (Guidelines for Perinatal Care, 2012). It has become common practice in US hospitals.
  • The book advises against using alcohol for routine umbilical cord care.
  • Alcohol cord care is advised in less developed countries with high infection rates.

When to Call for Umbilical Cord Symptoms

Call Doctor or Seek Care Now

  • Age less than 1 month old and looks or acts abnormal in any way
  • Bleeding won't stop after 10 minutes of direct pressure applied twice
  • Spot of blood more than 2 inches (5 cm) across
  • Red streak runs from the navel
  • Red skin spreads from around the navel
  • Fever in baby less than 12 weeks old. Caution: do NOT give your baby any fever medicine before being seen.
  • You think your child needs to be seen, and the problem is urgent

Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours

  • Small bleeding lasts more than 3 days
  • Pimples, blisters or sores near navel
  • Lots of drainage (such as urine, mucus, pus) from the navel
  • You think your child needs to be seen, but the problem is not urgent

Contact Doctor During Office Hours

  • After using care advice for 3 days, navel is not dry and clean
  • Small piece of red tissue inside the navel
  • Cord stays attached more than 6 weeks
  • You have other questions or concerns

Self Care at Home

  • Normal cord care
  • Normal navel care after cord falls off
  • Minor infection of cord or navel
  • Normal bleeding from cord or navel
  • Normal delayed separation of the cord after 3 weeks

Seattle Children's Urgent Care Locations

If your child’s illness or injury is life-threatening, call 911.

  • Bellevue
  • Everett
  • Federal Way
  • Seattle
  • Virtual Urgent Care

Care Advice

Treatment for Normal Umbilical Cord

  1. What You Should Know About Normal Umbilical Cords:
    • Normal cords don't need any special treatment.
    • Just keep them dry (called dry cord care or natural drying).
    • Reason: Cords need to dry up, before they will fall off.
    • As they dry up, cords normally change color. They go from a shiny yellowish hue, to brown or gray.
    • The cord will normally fall off between 1 and 3 weeks.
    • Here is some care advice that should help.
  2. Normal Dry Cord Care:
    • Check the skin around the base of the cord once a day.
    • Usually the area is dry and clean. No treatment is needed.
    • If there are any secretions, clean them away. Use a wet cotton swab. Then dry carefully.
    • You will need to push down on the skin around the cord to get at this area. You may also need to bend the cord a little to get underneath it.
    • Caution: Don't put alcohol or other germ killer on the cord. Reason: Dry cords fall off sooner. (Exception: instructed by your doctor to use alcohol).
  3. Bathing:
    • Keep the cord dry. Avoid tub baths.
    • Use sponge baths until the cord falls off.
  4. Fold Diaper Down:
    • Keep the area dry to help healing.
    • To provide air contact, keep the diaper folded down below the cord.
    • Another option for disposable diapers is to cut off a wedge with a scissors. Then seal the edge with tape.
  5. Poop on Cord:
    • Getting some poop on the cord or navel is not serious.
    • If it occurs, clean the area with soap and water.
    • This should prevent any infections.
  6. Call Your Doctor If:
    • Develops a red streak or redness around belly button
    • Fever occurs
    • Your baby starts to look or act abnormal
    • You think your child needs to be seen

Treatment for Normal Navel After Cord Falls Off

  1. What You Should Know About Navels After the Cord Falls Off:
    • The cord can't fall off too early.
    • The average cord falls off between 10 and 14 days. Normal range is 7 to 21 days. Even if it falls off before 7 days, you can follow this advice.
    • After the cord has fallen off, the navel will gradually heal.
    • It's normal for the center to look red at the point of separation.
    • It's not normal if the redness spreads on to the belly.
    • It's normal for the navel to ooze some secretions.
    • Sometimes the navel forms a scab. Let it heal up and fall off on its own.
    • The navel has a small risk of becoming infected.
    • Here is some care advice that should help.
  2. Normal Navel Care:
    • Keep the navel (belly button) clean and dry.
    • If there are any secretions, clean them away. Use a wet cotton swab. Then dry carefully.
    • Do this gently to prevent any bleeding.
    • Caution: Don't use any rubbing alcohol. Reason: can interfere with healing.
  3. Bathing:
    • After the cord falls off, continue sponge baths for a few more days.
    • Help the belly button area dry up.
    • Then, tub baths will be fine.
  4. Fold Diaper Down:
    • Keep the navel dry to help healing.
    • To provide air contact, keep the diaper folded down below the navel.
  5. What to Expect: The belly button should be healed and dry by 7 days.

  6. Call Your Doctor If:
    • Develops a red streak or redness around belly button
    • Fever occurs
    • Cloudy discharge occurs
    • Your baby starts to look or act abnormal
    • You think your child needs to be seen

Treatment for Minor Infection of Cord or Navel

  1. What You Should Know About a Minor Infection of Cord or Navel:
    • The belly button will ooze secretions for several days.
    • Normal secretions are clear or blood tinged mucus.
    • A cloudy discharge is usually a mild infection.
    • This can be from normal skin bacteria.
    • A small amount of pus may be present.
    • Here is some care advice that should help.
  2. Clean the Navel:
    • Clean the navel (belly button) 2 times a day.
    • Use a wet cotton swab or cloth.
    • Clean away any dried secretions or pus.
    • Do this gently to prevent any bleeding.
    • Caution: Don't use any rubbing alcohol. Reason: Can interfere with healing.
  3. Antibiotic Ointment for Pus:
    • If any pus is present, use an antibiotic ointment (such as Polysporin).
    • No prescription is needed.
    • Put a tiny amount on the belly button.
    • Do this 2 times per day after the area has been cleaned.
    • Do this for 2 days. After that, use the antibiotic ointment only if you see more pus.
  4. Bathing:
    • Do not use tub baths until the cord falls off. The navel should be well healed.
  5. Fold Diaper Down:
    • Keep the belly button dry to help healing.
    • To provide air contact, keep the diaper folded down. Keep it below the cord and belly button.
  6. What to Expect:
    • With treatment, the cloudy discharge and pus should be gone in 2 to 3 days.
    • The navel should become dry and healed by 7 days.
  7. Call Your Doctor If:
    • Develops a red streak or redness around the belly button
    • Fever occurs
    • Cloudy discharge not gone after 3 days of using this care advice
    • Your baby starts to look or act abnormal
    • You think your child needs to be seen

Treatment for Normal Bleeding Around Cord

  1. What You Should Know About Mild Bleeding Around the Cord:
    • A few drops of blood are normal when the cord falls off or catches on something.
    • The diaper rubbing against the belly button may make it start up again.
    • Here is some care advice that should help.
  2. Bleeding:
    • To stop bleeding, put direct pressure on the navel for 10 minutes. Use a clean cloth.
    • Clean the area beforehand, rather than afterwards.
    • Reason: This helps prevent bleeding from starting back up.
  3. Diaper:
    • Prevent the diaper from rubbing on the belly button.
    • Do this by folding the diaper down away from the belly button.
    • You can also cut a wedge out of the diaper.
  4. What to Expect:
    • The bleeding may come back a few times.
    • It should only be a small smear of blood.
    • The bleeding site should heal up by 2 days.
  5. Call Your Doctor If:
    • Bleeding gets worse
    • Few drops of blood lasts more than 3 days
    • Your baby starts to look or act abnormal
    • You think your child needs to be seen

Treatment for Normal Delayed Separation of the Cord Beyond 3 Weeks

  1. What You Should Know Cords Falling Off:
    • Most cords fall off between 10 and 14 days. Normal range is 7 to 21 days.
    • All cords slowly fall off on their own.
    • Continue to be patient.
    • Here is some care advice that should help.
  2. Stop Alcohol:
    • If you have been using rubbing alcohol to the cord, stop doing so.
    • Rubbing alcohol can kill the good bacteria that help the cord fall off.
  3. Diaper:
    • Help the cord dry up faster by keeping the diaper folded below it.
    • Another approach is to cut out a wedge of the diaper (if disposable).
    • Air contact helps the cord stay dry.
  4. Call Your Doctor If:
    • Cord starts to look infected
    • Fever occurs
    • Cord is still on for more than 6 weeks
    • Your baby starts to look sick or act abnormal
    • You think your child needs to be seen

And remember, contact your doctor if your child develops any of the 'Call Your Doctor' symptoms.

Disclaimer: this health information is for educational purposes only. You, the reader, assume full responsibility for how you choose to use it.

Last Reviewed: 10/11/2023

Last Revised: 12/30/2022

Copyright 2000-2023. Schmitt Pediatric Guidelines LLC.

Umbilical Cord Symptoms (2024)

FAQs

Umbilical Cord Symptoms? ›

The skin around the stump should be the same color as the rest of your baby's skin (no redness or discoloration). An infected umbilical stump looks different. You'll see redness or discoloration around the base of the stump. Fluid (possibly with a foul smell) may leak from the stump.

What are the signs and symptoms of umbilical cord? ›

The skin around the stump should be the same color as the rest of your baby's skin (no redness or discoloration). An infected umbilical stump looks different. You'll see redness or discoloration around the base of the stump. Fluid (possibly with a foul smell) may leak from the stump.

When should I be worried about my umbilical cord? ›

But you should call your baby's healthcare professional right away if: Bleeding from the stump gets worse, or you still notice a few drops of blood after three days.

How to know if there is an umbilical cord issue? ›

Signs of umbilical cord compression may include less activity from the baby, observed as a decrease in movement, or an irregular heartbeat, which can be observed by fetal heart monitoring.

What are the first signs of an umbilical cord prolapse? ›

The signs of a cord prolapse are:
  • you can feel something (the cord) in your vagin*.
  • you can see the cord coming from your vagin*.
  • your obstetrician or midwife can see or feel the cord in your vagin*.
  • the baby's heart rate slows (bradycardia) soon after your waters break.

How to tell if umbilical cord is infected? ›

After birth
  1. increased bleeding from the cord.
  2. discharge from the cord.
  3. bad odors coming from the cord.
  4. redness around the belly button or umbilical cord.
  5. a rash or blisters on or around the cord.
  6. fever.
  7. a baby who does not want to eat, or seems very sleepy.
  8. sudden changes in the baby's behavior.
Jul 30, 2020

What happens if I accidentally pull off my baby's umbilical cord? ›

If the cord stump is pulled off too soon, it could start actively bleeding, meaning every time you wipe away a drop of blood, another drop appears. If the cord stump continues to bleed, contact your baby's provider immediately.

When should I get my umbilical cord checked? ›

If your baby's stump has not fallen off in 4 weeks (and more likely much sooner), contact your baby's provider. There may be a problem with the baby's anatomy or immune system.

How to avoid cord wrapping around baby? ›

There's no way yet to prevent nuchal cords or unwind them from a baby's neck in the womb. But when a baby is born with a nuchal cord, your doctor will know what to do because it happens so frequently. The colored sections of the ultrasound show that the umbilical cord is under the baby's chin.

What is umbilical cord syndrome? ›

Umbilical cord conditions include the cord being too long or too short, not connecting well to the placenta or getting knotted or squeezed. These conditions can cause problems during pregnancy, labor and birth. If you have one of these conditions, your health care provider may find it during pregnancy on an ultrasound.

How do you know if your umbilical cord is about to fall off? ›

After childbirth, your provider will clamp the cord and then cut it, leaving a stump (umbilicus) behind. Between one to three weeks, the stump dries up and falls off. As the stump dries, it shrinks and changes in color from yellowish-green to brown to black before falling off.

Can a baby survive umbilical cord prolapse? ›

Can a baby survive a cord prolapse? Yes, most babies survive a cord prolapse. The rate of mortality for infants with umbilical cord prolapse in a hospital setting is about 3%, although one study has the rate as high as 7%. The outlook for umbilical cord prolapse when it occurs outside the hospital is poor.

What are fetal distress symptoms? ›

The most common signs of fetal distress are:
  • Changes in the fetal heart rate (lower or higher rate than normal).
  • The fetus moves less for an extended period of time.
  • Low amniotic fluid.
Aug 11, 2022

What are the symptoms of the umbilical cord around the neck? ›

A nuchal cord is when the umbilical cord becomes wrapped around the fetus's neck. Symptoms present in the baby shortly after birth from a prior nuchal cord may include duskiness of face, facial petechia, and bleeding in the whites of the eye.

What are the symptoms of knotted umbilical cord? ›

Even if they can't see one visually, they can detect other signs of a problem with blood flow to and from the placenta. For example, if your baby's heart rate is low or inconsistent, that could be a sign of a cord knot. Your baby may also be less active than normal since their nutrient supply is cut off.

How to know if the umbilical cord is wrapped around a baby? ›

Ultrasound is the most reliable method for detecting if the umbilical cord is wrapped around the baby's neck. Healthcare providers typically identify such cases during routine prenatal scans and monitor them closely to ensure the baby's well-being.

Top Articles
package.json Quick Start Guide | phoenixNAP KB
What is the collective noun of Angels
NOAA: National Oceanic & Atmospheric Administration hiring NOAA Commissioned Officer: Inter-Service Transfer in Spokane Valley, WA | LinkedIn
Public Opinion Obituaries Chambersburg Pa
Fort Morgan Hometown Takeover Map
Section 4Rs Dodger Stadium
Po Box 7250 Sioux Falls Sd
Ingles Weekly Ad Lilburn Ga
Grange Display Calculator
Terraria Enchanting
Moviesda Dubbed Tamil Movies
A Fashion Lover's Guide To Copenhagen
Audrey Boustani Age
1Win - инновационное онлайн-казино и букмекерская контора
George The Animal Steele Gif
6001 Canadian Ct Orlando Fl
RBT Exam: What to Expect
Meritas Health Patient Portal
Walmart End Table Lamps
Finger Lakes Ny Craigslist
Hollywood Bowl Section H
Richland Ecampus
Schedule 360 Albertsons
Optum Urgent Care - Nutley Photos
Skycurve Replacement Mat
Bay Area Craigslist Cars For Sale By Owner
Hesburgh Library Catalog
Royalfh Obituaries Home
Rural King Credit Card Minimum Credit Score
His Only Son Showtimes Near Marquee Cinemas - Wakefield 12
Barbie Showtimes Near Lucas Cinemas Albertville
Revelry Room Seattle
Puerto Rico Pictures and Facts
Wbli Playlist
Giantess Feet Deviantart
10 Most Ridiculously Expensive Haircuts Of All Time in 2024 - Financesonline.com
Imperialism Flocabulary Quiz Answers
Scottsboro Daily Sentinel Obituaries
Anya Banerjee Feet
Stranahan Theater Dress Code
21 Alive Weather Team
Love Words Starting with P (With Definition)
Hawkview Retreat Pa Cost
John Wick: Kapitel 4 (2023)
2294141287
Theater X Orange Heights Florida
Motorcycle For Sale In Deep East Texas By Owner
Craigslist Cars For Sale By Owner Memphis Tn
Maurices Thanks Crossword Clue
Zom 100 Mbti
Used Curio Cabinets For Sale Near Me
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Terence Hammes MD

Last Updated:

Views: 5555

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (49 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Terence Hammes MD

Birthday: 1992-04-11

Address: Suite 408 9446 Mercy Mews, West Roxie, CT 04904

Phone: +50312511349175

Job: Product Consulting Liaison

Hobby: Jogging, Motor sports, Nordic skating, Jigsaw puzzles, Bird watching, Nordic skating, Sculpting

Introduction: My name is Terence Hammes MD, I am a inexpensive, energetic, jolly, faithful, cheerful, proud, rich person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.