Final answer:
Fullness of the breast and urinary frequency are changes consistent with a two-month duration of pregnancy, corresponding to the second trimester. Significant weight gain, stretch marks, Braxton Hicks contractions, and quickening are symptoms more likely to appear later in the pregnancy.
Step-by-step explanation:
Findings in a woman that would be consistent with a pregnancy of two months duration (second trimester) are fullness of the breast and urinary frequency. During the second trimester, the pregnant person might experience a decrease in nausea and vomiting, if present during the first trimester, and start to notice weight gain. The breasts may become fuller as part of the body's preparation for breastfeeding, and increased urinary frequency occurs as the growing uterus puts pressure on the bladder.
Option B, stating fullness of the breast and urinary frequency as symptoms, corresponds with expected changes during two months of pregnancy. Option A mentions weight gain of 6-10 lbs. and the presence of striae gravidarum (stretch marks), which are more likely to occur later in pregnancy. Striae gravidarum may appear due to the skin stretching, but significant weight gain usually happens in the third trimester. Option C, Braxton Hicks contractions and quickening (feeling the fetus move), typically occur later in pregnancy, and Option D, an increased respiratory rate and ballottement (a method of feeling the fetus), are not typically associated with such an early stage of pregnancy.
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