Coitus and Fertilisation Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 4 stages of the sex response?

A
  • excitement
  • plateau
  • orgasm
  • resolution
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2
Q

Describe the excitement stage of the male sex response

A
  • psychological and physical stimulation of reogenous zones
  • tumescence and erection of penis
    ( due to stimulation of PSNS)
  • relaxation of smooth muscle of corpora cavernosa, corpus spongiosum allows inflow of blood resulting in increase in volume and rigidity
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3
Q

Describe the plateau stage of the male sex response

A
  • movement of ejaculate into prostatic or proximal part of urethra (under SNS control)
  • spinal reflex: forceful expulsion of semen from urethra
  • triggered by entry of semen from prostatic urethra into bulbous urethra
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4
Q

Describe the orgasm and resolution stage of the male sex response

A

Orgasm:

  • release of tension
  • generalised, rhythmic contraction of pelvic floor, ischiocavernoosus and bulbospongiosus muscles
  • spasmodic contractions of muscles of hips and anal sphincter

Resolution:

  • return to pre-excitement state, personal satisfaction and well being
  • refractory period
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5
Q

Describe the excitement stage of female sex response

A
  • psycological and physical stimulation of erogenous zones

- tumescence and erection of clitoris, engorgement of female tract (due to stimulation of PSNS)

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6
Q

Describe the plateau stage of female sex response

A
  • marked vasocongestion
  • sex flush on breasts, chest and epigastrium
  • engorgement of labia, lower third of vagina with narrowing of diameter, dilation of upper 2 thirds of vagina
  • clitoral swelling and erection
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7
Q

Describe the orgasm and resolution stage of female sex response

A

Orgasm:

  • release of tension
  • generalised, rhythmic myotonic contractions of perivaginal muscles, anal sphincter and uterus

Resolution:

  • return to pre-excitement state, personal satisfaction and well being
  • new excitement cycles may be initiated
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8
Q

When must sexual activity occur for successful fertilisation?

A

no more than 3 days before ovulation and no more than 1 day after ovulation

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9
Q

Describe the transport of the ovum to the fallopian tube

A
  • at ovulation egg is extruded onto the surface of the ovary
  • fimbriae sweep over ovary surface and pick up ovum
  • sticky cumulus cells cling to ciliated surface of fimbriae
  • movement of cilia and smooth muscle of fallopian tube propel ovum towards uterus
  • ovum released from ovary and wafted by fimbriae into fallopian tube
  • fertilised in ampulla
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10
Q

Describe the transport of the conceptus to the uterus

A
  • conceptus held in fallopian tube as oestrogen maintains contraction of smooth msucle near where fallopian tube enters wall of uterus
  • conceptus undergoes mitotic cell divisions (cleavage and morula is formed)
  • plasma progesteron levels rise 3-4 days after fertilisation, smooth muscle relaxes and conceptus moves into uterus
  • cavities then develop between cells (blastocyst)
  • blastocyst then lies free in uterine cavity supported by secretions
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11
Q

Describe the transport of sperm

A
  • ejaculation deposits millions of sperm into the vagina
  • sperm mortality from vagina to fallopian tube is large
  • passage into cervical mucus dependent on oestrogen- induced changes in mucus consistency
  • movement through uterus and fallopian tube is by sperms own propulsions and vaginal, cervical, uterine contractions and ciliary beat movement in fallopian tubes
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12
Q

What barriers are there to sperm making it to the fallopian tubes?

A
  • acidic vaginal environment
  • uterotubal junction anatomical barrier
  • phagocytosis by leucocytes in uterine lumen
  • length and energy requirements of the trip
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13
Q

What is capacitation?

A

a process involving:

  • increase in Ca2+ permeability causing a rise in intracellular Ca2+
  • removal of membrane proteins
  • change in surface charge
  • depletion of cholesterol

to allow sperm to fuse with egg

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14
Q

What are the results of capacitation?

A
  • instead of wave-like beats of sperm, whip-like action to propel sperm forward
  • sperm’s plasma membrane is altered so it can fuse with surface membrane of egg (acrosome reaction)
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15
Q

Describe how the sperm cell enters the egg

A
  • sperm cell binds to zona pellucida
  • rise in intracellular Ca2+ in sperm cell triggers exocytosis of acrosome, which contains hydrolytic enzymes that are released
  • enzymes locally dissolve zona pellucida and whip-like tail pushes sperm head toward oocyte membrane
  • microvilli on occyte surround sperm head and 2 membranes fuse
  • contents of sperm cell enter oocyte
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16
Q

Describe the events that take place after the sperm has entered the egg

A
  • a rise in intracellular Ca2+ inside oocyte triggers a cortical reaction
  • exocytosis of granules that before lay beneath plasma membrane
  • leads to changes in zona pellucida causing it to harden preventing entry of other sperm cells
  • second meiotic division completes forming a secon polar body
  • head of sperm enlarges to become male pronucleus with fuses with female pronucleus
17
Q

How does the blastocyst avoid maternal rejection?

A
  • releases immunosuppressive agents

- secretes hCG