1 / 23

Fetal Development Labor and delivery Chromosomal abnormalities

Fetal Development Labor and delivery Chromosomal abnormalities. After implantation, cells of blastocyst start to differentiate into three germ layers Ectoderm- skin and nervous system pituitary gland Mesoderm- connective tissue and muscle endocrine, cardiovascular, skeletal systems

morton
Download Presentation

Fetal Development Labor and delivery Chromosomal abnormalities

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Fetal Development Labor and delivery Chromosomal abnormalities

  2. After implantation, cells of blastocyst start to differentiate into three germ layers Ectoderm- skin and nervous system pituitary gland Mesoderm- connective tissue and muscle endocrine, cardiovascular, skeletal systems Endoderm- digestive, respiratory, urinary, reproductive systems

  3. By blastocyst By placenta

  4. “Extraembryonic membranes” Start forming after implantation Yolk sac- trasnport of nutrients, red blood cell formation. Role reduced> 6 weeks Amnion- encloses amniotic cavity. Fluid cushions developing embryo/fetus Allantois- forms urinary bladder; umbilical cord Chorion- blood vessels help nourish embryo; develops into placenta

  5. Placenta Umbilical arteries and veins provide fetal circulation Maternal circulation does not actually mix with fetal blood Gas and nutrient exchange takes place here Secretes estrogen and progesterone to maintain endometrium

  6. Four weeks

  7. 8 weeks

  8. Labor and childbirth Labor oxytocin (hypothalamus) prostaglandins Fetal adrenal gland produces cortisol and an estrogen precursor; makes uterus more sensitive to oxytocin and prostaglandins CRH secretion by placenta triggers fetal adrenal gland activity

  9. Developmental defects Aneuploidy (“wrong” number of chromosomes) Karyotyping- chromosomal analysis Down syndrome- trisomy 21 Edwards syndrome- trisomy 18 Patau syndrome- trisomy 13 Triploidy- an extra set of chromosomes

  10. Abnormal number of sex chromosomes XO- Turner syndrome XXY- Klinefelter syndrome XYY syndrome Arises due to “mistakes” in meiosis Developmental problems- spontaneous or due to exposure to harmful substances (teratogens)

  11. Proper fetal development depends on: Nutrition Freedom from infection Avoidance of drugs and alcohol Avoidance of smoking lowers vitamin levels substances in smoke can cross placental barrier

  12. Development does not stop at birth! Neonate- rapid growth and neurological development Puberty- sexual maturation “Secondary sexual characteristics” Aging-?

  13. Contraception- prevention of pregnancy Sterilization Abstinence Hormonal (birth-control pills) male pill? Anti-implantation Barrier

  14. Infertility Artificial insemination Egg donation Embryo transfer In vitro fertilization Intrafallopian transfer

  15. Summary • Progression from gametes to zygote to multicellular organism • Development, labor and delivery under hormonal control • Aneuploidy leads to serious developmental defects • Development does not stop at birth

More Related