Preggers Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

Outline the fluctuating levels of hormones seen in the menstrual cycle:

  • Day 1 - Day 14
  • Day 14 - Day 28
  • In the case of fertilisation
A

Day 1 - Day 14

  • Oestrogen levels increase and peak at 14 days.
  • Progesterone levels remain low throughout the first 14 days.

Day 14 - 28

  • Oestrogen levels decrease through the next 2 weeks.
  • Progesterone levels peak and then through again by the end of the cycle (if pregnancy has not occurred.)

Fertilisation

  • Progesterone levels won’t decrease as normal, instead increasing further than what would be seen in a normal (non-preg.) situation
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2
Q

What does progesterone fo to the endometrium?

A
  • Causes thickening of the endometrium, causing cell changes (stromal cells) and turning it into “decidua”
    • Initially in preparation for a fertilised egg.
    • Then in the case of fertilisation it thickens further to support the growing embryo.
  • Along with thickening there is increased vascularlity.
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3
Q

What do the stromal cells of the endometrium do?

A

The stromal cells enlarge between the vessels and glands and become procoagulant, thereby stopping bleeding.

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4
Q

What is another name for a fertilised egg?

What are found on the surface of the egg?

What do these produce?

A
  • Egg fertilised by ‘chorion’
  • Outer edge of chorion - Trophoblast cells on outside of fertilised egg.
  • These trophoblast cells produce B-HCG
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5
Q

What is B-HCG?

What is the target for this hormone?

What is its function?

What is this hormone used for clincially?

A
  • Beta Human Chorionic Gonadotrophin
  • Target - Corpus luteum in the Ovary
  • Function - stimulate corpus luetum to produce progestrogen throughout pregnancy, which stops the decidua from shedding.
  • Clinical - basis of pregnancy tests
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6
Q

What happens when the fertilised egg reaches the decidua?

A
  • Fertilised egg burrows into the decidua.
  • Trophoblast cells stream off to invade the mother’s blood vessels eventually linking these vessels with that of the foetus
  • Projections of chorion (chorionic villi), covered in trophoblast cells, start to move into the decidua.
  • The decidual cells are procoagulant and stop bleeding when the trophoblast cells invade mother’s blood.
  • Eventually the chorionic villi, covered in trophoblast cells, are bathed in the mother’s blood, forming the forerunner of the placenta.
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