Prenatal Development Flashcards

1
Q

Epigenesis

A

The emergence of new structures and functions during development

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2
Q

Canalization

A
  • Refers to developmental
    reduction in plasticity
  • Initially cells can become
    anything (stem cells); as
    development progresses, it’s
    harder to change paths
  • Studies with frogs: you can
    change a cell’s path by simply
    moving it - development
    influenced by neighbouring cells
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3
Q

Gametes

A

Egg and sperm

  • Eggs are much bigger (largest cell!) and all formed
    prenatally; sperm much smaller and formed throughout
    lifespan
  • haploid = only half the genetic material found in other
    diploid cells
  • 23 chromosomes v. 23 pairs of chromosomes
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4
Q

Fertilization & Conception

A
  • While millions of sperm are ejaculated, only ~200
    reach the egg (most get lost, tangled up, or have
    other genetic defects - survival of the fittest!)
  • Takes about 6 hours to go 6-7 inches
  • When one penetrates, zona reaction occurs,
    blocks other sperm from entering
  • sperm tail falls off and rest goes into egg
  • zygote = fertilized egg with (hopefully) 23
    chromosomes from mom and 23 from dad
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5
Q

Sex differences do not begin at conception

A

Conception rates are equal, but girls more likely to miscarry early

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6
Q

Sexual Differentiation

A
  • All about hormones
  • Androgens, including testosterone, are produced
    by the genetically male fetus and cause male anatomy
    to develop that eventually produces testosterone
    itself
  • Testosterone in a genetic female can cause male
    anatomy and brain differentiation
  • Studies have shown a link between levels of prenatal
    testosterone and gender-typed behaviour and
    homosexuality
  • Not uncontroversial, more (bigger) studies needed
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7
Q

Processes of Development

A

Four major developmental processes transform a zygote into an
embryo and then into a fetus:
1. Cell division = mitosis results in the proliferation of cells
2. Cell migration the movement of cells from their point of origin to
somewhere else in the embryo
3. Cell differentiation transforms the embryo’s unspecialized stem cells
into roughly 350 different types of cells
4. The selective death of certain cells, or apoptosis, also enables prenatal
development
* hand development

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8
Q

Germinal & Embryonic Periods

A

Germinal (Conception - 2 weeks):
- Begins with conception and lasts until the zygote becomes implanted in the uterine wall
- Rapid cell division takes place

Embryonic (3rd - 8th week):
- Following implantation, major development occurs in all the organs and systems of the body
- Blastocyst implants into uterine wall - now an embryo
- Placenta and amniotic sac form, chemicals released to preserve pregnancy
- Most sensitive period of development
- Rapid cell division
- Major organs forming
- Most miscarriages happen here

Fetal (9th week - birth):
- Continued development of physical structures and rapid growth of the body.
- Increasing levels of behavior, sensory experience , and learning

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9
Q

Twins

A
  • Determined during Germinal Period

Monozygotic = Identical; inner cell mass splits
- Siblings share 100% genetic material (not exactly)
- Identical - usually share same placenta (wit own amniotic sacs)
- It doesn’t always happen, if split happens late, may share same sac - risk of umbilical cord entanglement
- very late - conjoined
- Identical twinning is not hereditary, while fraternal/DZ twinning is ( tendency for hyper-ovulation can be passed down)

Dizygotic = fraternal; 2 eggs released and fertilized by different sperm
- Siblings share 50% genetic material

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10
Q

Embryo

A

In week 2-3, inner cell mass folds into 3 layers
- top = nervous system, nails, teeth, inner ear, lens of eyes, outer
surface of skin
- middle = muscles, bones, circulatory system, inner layers of skin,
other intestinal organs
- bottom = digestion, lungs, urinary tract, glands

Top layers folds in on itself and becomes the
neural tube
- becomes the brain and the spinal cord
Spina bifida results from closure errors here

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11
Q

Amniotic Sac/Placenta

A
  • Amniotic sac filled with amniotic fluid - protects baby, lets it move unhampered by gravity

Placenta
- a network of blood vessels that allows for exchanging fluids between fetus and mom
- Connected to embryo by the umbilical cord
- Semipermeable - let good stuff in and bad stuff out (also let bad stuff in)
- Produces hormones

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12
Q

Fetal Activities

A

Movement
- Babies move from 5-6 weeks!
- 7-week-old fetuses hiccup
- Activity level individual differences, and there’s continuity in
this after birth
- More active fetuses = more active, less inhibited children

Seem to “practice” for life outside the womb:
- Bringing hand to mouth
- Swallowing amniotic fluid promotes the normal development of the palate and aids in the maturation of the digestive system
- Movement of the chest wall and pulling in and expelling small amounts of amniotic fluid help the respiratory system become functional

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13
Q

Sleeping

A

Quiet Sleep
- Occasional startle
- No eye movements
- Stable heart rate

Active Sleep
- Like REM
- Frequent body and eye movements
- Heart rate accelerates in association with movements
- Most common state

Quiet Awake
- No body movements
- Eye movements
- Stable heart rate
- Rare

Active Awake
- Continual body and eye movements
- Unstable heart rate
- Tachycardia (increased pulse rate)

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14
Q

Fetal Senses

A

Fetus feels, tastes, smells, and hears
- Feels own movements
- Tastes and smells amniotic fluid (sweet = good)
- Hear mom’s bodily sounds; her voice; startles to loud sounds
- Seeing is minimal

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15
Q

Fetal Learning

A

Full-term newborns prefer things they experienced and heard prenatally

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16
Q

Hazards to Prenatal Development

A

Miscarriage = spontaneous abortion

Premature Infants
- Anything under 34 weeks gestation is considered premature
- Incidence of lifelong problems increases with premises

17
Q

Teratogens

A

Any environmental agent that can potentially cause harm during prenatal development

Identifying Teratogens
- Alcohol
- Smoking
- Mercury
- Marijuana
- Maternal diseases
- Illegal drugs

Maternal Factors
- Age
- Nutrition
- Stress-level

18
Q

Birth

A
  • Birth not painful for baby
  • Large cultural differences in childbirth practices
  • Pain relieving drugs do not harm newborns nor increase C-sections
  • Development is continuous
19
Q

Newborn

A
  • Lots of Sleep
  • About half REM
  • Autostimulation theory - brain activity during REM facilitates visual development in fetuses and newborns
  • Myoclonic twitching - jerky movements; building sensorimotor maps
  • Can learn while sleeping
20
Q

Neonatal Intensive Care

A

Babies in the NICU for a variety of reasons:
- Prematury-related issues: immature lungs mean can’t breathe on own; jaundice
- Developmental defects that are corrected post-birth; recovery from surgery in NICU

Effects on Infants
- Noise - beeping machines
- Light - 24 hours/day
- Pain - pin pricks, surgical cuts
- Drugs - analgesics, antibiotics, sedatives
- Separation from maternal interaction

Effects on Parents
- Parents have little or no preparation for NICU experience
- Depending on level of prematurity, less prepared for the arrival of (even a healthy) infant
- Feelings of fear, grief loss of control
- Life or death decisions

Outcomes for NICU infants
- Some infants more sensitive to pain (often premature)
- Some infants less sensitive (often term, but ELBW)
- Pain tolerance issues appear to diminish over time

Post-NICU premature/ELBW babies
- Regardless of effects of NICU, it is simply harder to interact with a preterm/LBW infant
- Show less attention to novel stimuli, issues habituating
- Self-regulation issues - difficult to settle, irritable
- Sleep issues
- Mixed cues in mother-infant facial exchanges

21
Q

Multiple-Risk Model

A

Long term outcomes depend on whether had one or more than one risk factor