Placenta - meaning and definition. What is Placenta
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What (who) is Placenta - definition

ORGAN THAT CONNECTS THE DEVELOPING FOETUS TO THE UTERINE WALL
Placental barrier; After-birth; Placental hormones; Secundines; Mother-fetus barrier; Placentate; Placental circulation; Fetoplacental; Human placenta; Maternal-fetal barrier; Fetal-maternal interface; Transplacental crossing; Chorioallantoic placenta; Blood-placental barrier; Succenturiate placenta; Placenta succenturiata; User:Placento
  • Maternal blood fills the [[intervillous space]], nutrients, water, and gases are actively and passively exchanged, then deoxygenated blood is displaced by the next maternal pulse.
  • The initial stages of [[human embryogenesis]]
  • Ultrasound image of human placenta and umbilical cord (color Doppler rendering) with central cord insertion and three umbilical vessels, at 20 weeks of pregnancy
  • Placenta

placenta         
(placentas)
The placenta is the mass of veins and tissue inside the womb of a pregnant woman or animal, which the unborn baby is attached to.
The drug can be transferred to the baby via the placenta.
N-COUNT: usu the N
Placenta         
·noun The part of a pistil or fruit to which the ovules or seeds are attached.
II. Placenta ·noun The vascular appendage which connects the fetus with the parent, and is cast off in parturition with the afterbirth.
placenta         
n.
Secundines, after-birth.

Wikipedia

Placenta

The placenta is a temporary embryonic and later fetal organ that begins developing from the blastocyst shortly after implantation. It plays critical roles in facilitating nutrient, gas and waste exchange between the physically separate maternal and fetal circulations, and is an important endocrine organ, producing hormones that regulate both maternal and fetal physiology during pregnancy. The placenta connects to the fetus via the umbilical cord, and on the opposite aspect to the maternal uterus in a species-dependent manner. In humans, a thin layer of maternal decidual (endometrial) tissue comes away with the placenta when it is expelled from the uterus following birth (sometimes incorrectly referred to as the 'maternal part' of the placenta). Placentas are a defining characteristic of placental mammals, but are also found in marsupials and some non-mammals with varying levels of development.

Mammalian placentas probably first evolved about 150 million to 200 million years ago. The protein syncytin, found in the outer barrier of the placenta (the syncytiotrophoblast) between mother and fetus, has a certain RNA signature in its genome that has led to the hypothesis that it originated from an ancient retrovirus: essentially a virus that helped pave the transition from egg-laying to live-birth.

The word placenta comes from the Latin word for a type of cake, from Greek πλακόεντα/πλακοῦντα plakóenta/plakoúnta, accusative of πλακόεις/πλακούς plakóeis/plakoús, "flat, slab-like", with reference to its round, flat appearance in humans. The classical plural is placentae, but the form placentas is more common in modern English.

Examples of use of Placenta
1. "But that‘s what happened." Because of two conditions she suffered during her pregnancy – placenta previa, where the placenta is wedged against the cervix, and placenta percreta, in which the placenta grows through the uterus – she was admitted to hospital in March.
2. Doctors say she is in good health but shows symptoms of partial placenta previa, in which part of the placenta drops too low in the uterus.
3. Many women are told they have a low–lying placenta but the danger occurs when the placenta does not move upwards in time for the birth.
4. Doctors have said Kiko has symptoms of partial placenta previa, a condition in which part of the placenta drops too low in the uterus.
5. It is called placenta praevia and occurs when the placenta grows in the womb over the cervix – blocking the birth canal.