Implantation 3 Flashcards

Describe the development of the placenta, especially focusing on the roles of cellular differentiation and vascular development.

1
Q

Describe the developmental progress of the placenta by day 7.5 to 8 after fertilization.

A
  • Embryoblast normally at the invasion site with differentiation of the underlying trophoblast into:
    • cytotrophoblast
      • rapidly proliferating inner layer of mononuclear cells
    • outer nultinucleated zone without cell membranes (true syncytium) - syncytiotrophoblast
  • Cytotrophoblast contributes the cells to the syncytiotrophoblast by fusion
  • Inner cell mass differentiates into two layers
    • hypoblast
    • epiblast
      • small cavity appears destined to form the amniotic cavity
      • cells adjacent to the cytotrophoblast are called amnioblasts
      • will give rise to the amnion
  • Endometrial stroma (decidua) adjacent to the implantation is highly vascular and edematous
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2
Q

What happens during day 9 of placental development?

A
  • Lacunar stage
    • blastocyst is more deeply imbedded into the endometrium
    • penetration defect at the uterine surface covered by a fibrin clot
    • vacuoles begin to form within the invading syncytium
      • these fuse to form large lacunae (no blood yet)
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3
Q

What happens during day 11-12 of placental development?

A
  • Blastocyst completely embedded in the endometrial stroma
  • Re-epithelialization of the uterine surface
  • Embryonic pole continues to be the site of syncytiotophoblast invasion and lacunae formation
  • Opposite (abembryonic) pole, trophoblast consists almost entirely of cytotrophoblast
  • Syncytiotrophoblasts begin to invade maternal vessels, fillin glacunae with blood
    • Establishment of the uteroplacental circulation
  • A new population of cells arise
    • extraembryonic mesoderm
      • from between the cytotrophoblast and outer surface of the exocoelomic cavity (derived from yolk sac cells)
      • cells destined to become chorion
      • large spaces form in the extraembryonic mesoderm and become confluent to form the chorionic cavity
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4
Q

What happens by day 13 of placental development?

A
  • Cytotrophoblast cells proliferate at the invasion front
    • penetrate into the syncytiotrophoblast forming cell columns
      • referred to as primary villi
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5
Q

What has happened by the beginning o the third week in early placental development?

A
  • Primary villi consist of a cytotrophoblast core covered by syncytiotrophoblast
  • Extraembryonic mesoderm cells begin to invade the cytotrophoblast core growing towardss the decidua
    • This is now referred to as a secondary villous
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6
Q

What has happened by the end of the third week in the development of the placenta?

A
  • Mesoderm derived cells begin to differentiate into blood cells and small vessels
  • Villi now referred to as teriary or definitive villi
  • Capillaries in the villi will connect to the developing vessels in the chorionic plate and connecting stalk, which will connect to the intraembryonic blood vessels
    • connects fetal and placental circulations in preparation for the beginning of a continuous fetal circulation when the fetal heart begins to beat in the fourth week of development
  • Cytotrophoblasts continue to invade the syncytiotrophoblast and penetrate to the maternal endometrium
    • forms outer cytotrophoblast shell
      • direct contact with decidua
      • will become extravillous trophoblasts at the basal plate
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7
Q

What has happened by the second month of the development of the placenta?

A
  • Secondary and tertiary villi have formed from the stem villi
  • Surface of the villi in direct contact with the maternal blood of the intervillous space now covered by syncytiotrophoblasts
  • Erosion of the maternal spiral arteries occurs
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8
Q

What happens to the villi at the embryonic pol during placental development? What about the abembryonic pole villi?

A
  • Embryonic pole
    • continually expand and give rise to the chorion frondosum (bushy chorion)
  • Abembryonic pole
    • villi degenerate and form sthe chorion laeve (smooth chorion)
    • will come in contact with the uterine wall and fuse, obliterating the uterine cavity
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9
Q

What has happened by the third month to placental development?

A
  • Only chorion frondosum and decidualis basalis will participate in gas and nutrient exchange
    • these make up the definitive placenta
  • Amnion overgrows the mbryo to completely surround it
    • eventually fuses with the chorion
    • obliterates the chorionic cavity and forms the amniochorionic membranes (ruptures during labor)
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10
Q

What are the specialized cell types that the cytotrphoblast can differentiate into?

A
  • Extravillous trophoblast
    • endovascular trophoblast - invades and remodel maternal vessels
    • trophoblast giant cells - can invade into myometrium and others
  • Syncytiotrophoblast
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11
Q

What has happened by the 4th and 5th month to placental development?

A
  • Several decidual septae form that project into the intervillous space
    • Separate the maternal surface into 15-20 cotyledons
  • Placenta continues to enlarge, covering about 15-30% of the internal surface of the uterus
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12
Q

What happens to the capillaries in the terminal villi as maturation of the fetus proceeds?

A
  • More closely associated with the syncytiotrophoblast layer
    • increases diffusion efficacy (decreases diffusion distance
  • Terminal villi get smaller and more numerous
  • Syncytial knots (Tenney-Parker change) increase as gestation proceeds
  • Calcifications also increase as term approaches
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