Placentation Flashcards

1
Q

How is early embryo nutrition given?

A

Histiotrophic:

reliant on uterine gland secretions and breakdown of endometrial tissues

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2
Q

Why is embryo fetal growth during the first trimester limited?

A

Due to the histiotrophic nature of nutrition

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3
Q

At the start of the 2nd trimester what nutrition is used?

A

Haemotrophic support:

start to derive nutrients from maternal blood through haemochorial type placenta * meaning maternal blood is directly in contact with fetal membranes and this is why the switch occurs from histio to haemotrophic

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4
Q

What does the amnion do? (inner fetal membrane)

A

derivative of epiblast that does not become a part of the fetus

but rather becomes the amniotic cavity and then amniotic sac

secretes amniotic fluid from 5th week - this is how the fluid filled sac is made

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5
Q

What is the connecting stalk?

A

Links developing embryo unit to the chorion

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6
Q

What are trophoblastic lucaenea?

A

large spaces full of maternal blood made by breakdown of her capillaries and uterine gland

become intervillous aka maternal blood spaces *capillaries join and become long and continuous

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7
Q

What are fetal membranes?

A

extraembryonic tissues that form a tough but flexible sac encapsulates the fetus and forms the basis of the maternal-fetal interface.

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8
Q

What is the chorion? (outer fetal membrane)

A

made from yolk sac and trophoblast

highly vascularised

gives rise to chorionic villi - outgrowths of cytotrophoblast from chorion that forms basis of the fetal side of the placenta

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9
Q

What is the allantois?

A

Outgrowth of the yolk sac

grows along the connecting stalk from embryo to chorion

becomes coated in mesoderm and vascularises to form the umbilical cord

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10
Q

How is the amniotic sac made with both fetal membranes involved?

A

Expansion of the sac by fluid accumulation pushes the amnion into contact with the chorion = fusion = amniotic sac

so it has two laters, amnion on inside and chorion on outside

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11
Q

What are primary chorionic villi?

A

cytotrophoblast finger like projection through the syncitiotrophoblast layer into maternal endometrium

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12
Q

What is the purpose of the chorionic villi?

A

substantial SA for exchange of gases and nutrtients

these projections undergo branching

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13
Q

What are the three phases of chorionic villi development?

A

primary :outgrowth of the cytotrophoblast and branching of these extensions

secondary: : growth of the fetal mesoderm into the primary villi
tertiary: growth of the umbilical artery and umbilical vein into the villus mesoderm, providing vasculature.
* image on slide 8

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14
Q

How do the villi change from early pregnancy to late pregnancy?

A

early : 150-200µm diameter, approx. 10µm trophoblast thickness between capillaries and maternal blood

late : : villi thin to 40µm, vessels move within villi to leave only 1-2µm trophoblast separation from maternal blood.

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15
Q

What does the convulation and dilated of the villi allow?

A

Slow blood flow in vessels for better exchange

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16
Q

Describe the maternal blood supply to the endometrium?

A

uterine artery branches –> arcuate arteries (uterine will fuse with ovarian)

arcuate –> radial arteries

radial arteries –> basal arteries which from spiral arteries during menstrual cycle endometrial thickening * these are lost if implantion does not occur

17
Q

WHat do extra villus trophoblast cells do? (EVT cells)

A

Coat villus and invade down into maternal spiral arteries to form

Endovascular EVT cells

made to replace the broken down endothelium and smooth muscle of the mother

18
Q

What does conversion mean?

A

spiral artery re-modelling

The process of EVT coating the spiral arteries

affect: turns the spiral artery into low pressure, high capacity conduit for maternal blood flow

19
Q

What nutrients are being exchanged across the placenta?

A
O2
Glucose
Water
Electrolytes
Calcium
Amino acids
20
Q

How is calcium transported across placenta?

A

active transport by Mg ATPase calcium pump

21
Q

How is Oxygen transported across placenta?

A

diffusion, high maternal low vs fetal

22
Q

How is glucose transported across placenta?

A

transporters on maternal side and fetal trophoblast cells

23
Q

How is water transported across placenta?

A

placenta main site of exchange, though some crosses amnion-chorion. Majority by diffusion, though some local hydrostatic gradients.

24
Q

How is electrolytes transported across placenta?

A

large traffic of sodium and other electrolytes across the placenta – combination of diffusion and active energy-dependent co-transport.

25
Q

How is amino acids transported across placenta?

A

reduced maternal urea excretion and active transport of amino acids to fetus

26
Q

What maternal changes occur to allow maternal fetal oxygen exchange?

A

CO increase by 30% during first trimester

peripheral resistance decrease up to 30%

maternal blood volume increases to 40%

pulmonary ventilation increases 40%

27
Q

What placenta and fetal changes occur to allow maternal fetal oxygen exchange?

A
  • Placenta consumes 40-60% glucose and O2 supplied
  • But although fetal O2 tension is low, O2 content and saturation are similar to maternal blood.
  • Embryonic and fetal hemoglobins: greater affinity for O2 than maternal hemoglobin.