Placenta

From WikiMD's Wellness Encyclopedia

(Redirected from Placental circulation)

Placenta is an organ formed in the uterus during pregnancy that links the blood of the mother to the blood of the fetus.

Placenta timeline
Placenta timeline

Purpose[edit | edit source]

Placenta is the organ that provides the fetus with nutrients and removes waste.

Placenta
Placenta accreta

Development[edit | edit source]

Between Weeks 0 and 13, the fertilized blastocyst embeds in the uterine wall, and development of the fetus and placenta begin. At this time, the placenta is a relatively low-oxygen environment. Placental villi are lined with cells known as cytotrophoblasts and syncytiotrophoblasts. The cytotrophoblasts breach the uterine wall and begin reshaping blood vessels there. These remodeled vessels become a source of maternal blood for the placenta. The placenta develops to bring oxygen and nutrients to the fetus and to move harmful waste and nutrients away. Over time, the villi develop increasingly dense branching to accommodate the increased demand of the developing fetus.

Reshaping of spiral arteries[edit | edit source]

Placenta invasion
Placenta invasion

Spiral arteries in the uterine wall are remodeled to supply blood to the fetus during pregnancy. When there is no pregnancy, the spiral artery spans the tissue of the uterine wall, supplying blood to the lining. In a normal pregnancy, cytotrophoblast cells from placental villi invade the space around the spiral artery, replacing cells which normally line the vessel.

Also see[edit | edit source]

Placenta previa - a problem of pregnancy in which the placenta grows in the lowest part of the uterus and covers all or part of the opening to the cervix.


Placenta Resources
Wikipedia
WikiMD
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Contributors: Prab R. Tumpati, MD