14 - Placenta Flashcards
What day does implanation occur and where does it occur?
- Day 6 after it has hatched from zona pellucida
- Usually implants on superior body of uterus but can implant lower down or on previous C-section scars that are not viable or not in the uterus
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What are some problems with invasion of the conceptus into the endometrial wall?
- Too deep: placenta accreata
- Incomplete invasion: miscarriage or placental insufficiency that can lead to preeclampsia
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When does the placenta develop and how?
- Week 2 before anything else
- From fetal membranes
- Chorionic sac and amniotic sac separate but then as the amniotic sac enlarges it displaces the chorion and fuses with the chorionic membrane
- Projections around all surfaces of this membrane concentrated into a small disc like space that becomes the placenta
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What does implanation achieve?
- Basic unit of exchange
- Anchor the placenta
- Establish maternal blood flow
What are chorionic villi?
- Villi that sprout from the chorion membrane
- Inner connective tissue core, where fetal vessels can form, and outer layer of syncytiotrophoblasts
- Maternal blood vessels surround villi so exchange can occur but mixing of circulations never
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How do the chorionic villi change over pregnancy?
1st trimester: barrier between maternal and fetal blood vessels thick. Full layers of cytotrophoblasts and syncytiotrophoblasts
3rd trimester: barrier less, becomes one layer of trophoblast by reducing cytotrophoblasts
Margination of fetal capillaries and loss of trophoblasts
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How is the degree of invasion of the conceptus controlled?
Decidua = endometrial becomes specialised through decidualisation
If implantation in correct place but decidual reaction is suboptimal can lead to complications like miscarriage, infertility or placental insufficiency leading to pre-eclampsia
Implanation in incorrect place then no decidual reaction so ectopic
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Label the gross morphology of the placenta.
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- Amnion on outside with chorion vessels underneath
- Need to check placenta for cotyledons to check none of them have fallen out and can cause post partum haemorraghe
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What are the main blood vessels exchanging the placenta and how are they arranged?
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- Endometrial arteries bathe the villi
- Paired umbilical arteries carry waste products to villi
- Single umbilical vein takes oxygen and nutrients to fetus
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What is the endocrine function of the placenta?
- hCG from syncytiotrophoblasts maintain corpus luteum in first trimester. urine and blood tests
- Steroid hormones made to take over corpus luteum and produce enough oestrogen and progesterone to keep body in pregnant state
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Why may someone have high levels of hCG in their blood?
- Pregnancy specific, from syncytiotrophoblasts
- Molar pregnancy
- Testicular cancer
- Choriocarcinoma
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How do placenta hormones change the metabolic state of the mother?
- Progesterone: increases appetite to allow increased fat deposition to support fetus and breast feeding
- Human Placental Lactogen (hCS): creates diabetogenetic state by causing insulin resistance to mother so more glucose availability for fetus
How does transport across the placenta occur?
- Simple diffusion: water, gases, electrolytes
- Facilitated diffusion: glucose
- Active transport: aa’s, Fe, vitamins
- Receptor mediated endocytosis: IgG’s
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How does gas exchange occurs across the placenta?
- Simple diffusion
- Flow limited and fetal O2 stores are low so adequate flow essential
- Can have fetal distress (hypoxia) in labour contractions as they compress uteroplacental circulation
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How does the baby confer immunity?
- IgG antibodies from mother can pass across placenta via receptor mediated endocytosis
- Protects baby