Basic Embryology Flashcards
- What is the prenatal period?
- Gynecologic timing has been from LMP therefore refers to what?
- 38 weeks from conception to birth (average) “fetal” age
- Gynecologic timing has been from LMP therefore refers to 40 weeks “gestational” age: LMP is on average two weeks before ovulation
Traditional (artificial) division:
- “Embryonic” period is when and what occurs here?
2. Fetal period is when and what occurs here?
- “Embryonic” period:
First 8 weeks
All major organs formed
- “Fetal” period:
Remaining 30 weeks
Organs grow larger and become more complex
Describe the 5 steps in implantation?
See picture
Define the following:
- Ovulation?
- Fertilization?
- Zygote?
- Cell division?
- Ovulation: egg released into the peritoneal cavity
- Fertilization: occurs as egg travels down fallopian tube
- Zygote: the cell that forms when the ova and sperm fuse
- Cell division: begins immediately as the zygote travels down the fallopian tube & into the uterus
Week 1 post conception:
- What divides repeatedly moving down tube toward uterus (cleavage)?
- What are the daughter cells called?
- What is the morula?
- What occurs by day 4?
- zygote
- The daughter cells are called blastomeres
- Morula: the solid cluster of 12-16 blastomeres at about 72 hours
- Day 4: 60 cell morula enters uterus, taking up fluid becoming blastocyst
- Blastocyst stage: has two distinct cell types. What are they and what is their function?
- This floats around for how many days?
- Implantation is what day post conception?
- How does implantation occur?
- How long does this take?
- What would have to happen to produce monozygotic twins?
- Two distinct types of cells:
- Inner cell mass: forms the embryo
- Trophoblast: layer of cells surrounding the cavity which helps form the placenta - Floats for about 3 days
- Implantation: day 6 post conception:
- Trophoblast erodes into uterine wall
- Takes 1 week to complete
- If inner cell mass of a single blastocyst divides: —monozygotic (identical) twins
- What does the inner cell mass divide into in week 2?
- what are the two fluid filled sacs and what do they arise from? 2
- What structure gives rise to the whole body?
- Inner cell mass divides:
- Epiblast
- Hypoblast - 2 fluid filled sacs:
- Amniotic sac from epiblast
- Yolk sac from hypoblast - Bilaminar embryonic disc: (gives rise to the whole body!)
Describe the 12 steps between the fertilized egg and the start of the amniotic sac growing
See picture
- In week three what the bilaminar disc turn into?
- Three primary “germ” layers:[body tissues develop from these]
- Bilaminar to trilaminar disc
- Three primary “germ” layers:[body tissues develop from these]
- Ectoderm
- Endoderm
- Mesoderm
What kind of tissue do the following arise from:
- Ectoderm and endoderm?
- Mesoderm?
- Mesenchyma?
- Ectoderm and endoderm are epithelial tissue (form sheets of tissue)
- Mesoderm is a mesenchyme tissue
- Mesenchyme cells are star shaped and do not attach to one another, therefore migrate freely
FORMATION OF THE 3 GERM LAYERS
- Primitive streak (groove) is located where?
- Grastrulation is what?
- Days 14-15: they replace hypoblast becoming _______
- Day 16: _________ (a new third layer)
- Epiblast cells remaining on surface and are what?
- on dorsal surface of epiblast
- invagination of epiblast cells
- endoderm
- mesoderm
- ectoderm
- What develops in days 16-18?
- Migrate where with some endoderm cells?
- WHAT IS FORMED IN THIS PERIOD?
- Future site of what?
- Primitive node epiblast cells invaginate
- migrate anteriorly with some endoderm cells
- Rod defining the body axis is formed!!!
- Future site of the vertebral column
What happens during neurulation?
3 steps
- Notochord signals overlying ectoderm
- Formation begins of spinal cord and brain (neurulation)
- Neural plate to neural groove to neural tube: pinched off into body
What happens during week three?
Mesoderm begins to differentiate:
Lateral to notochord, week 3
Extends cranially and caudally (from head to tail or crown to rump)
Division of mesoderm into three regions: What are they?
- Somites: 40 pairs of body segments (repeating units, like building blocks) by end week 4
- Intermediate mesoderm: just lateral to somites
- Lateral plate: splits to form coelom (“cavity”)