Science, asked by Neha5162, 10 months ago

describe in brief the structure and function of placenta


plz tell according to 5 marks
but not from the book or net in simple and easy words

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Answers

Answered by RonakMangal
1

Explanation:

Provides nourishment to embryo from mother's blood. Removal of waste from embryo to mother's blood.

Answered by mandarokar
2

Answer:

placenta is the composite structure of embryonic and maternal tissues that supplies nutrients to the developing embryo. The placenta is a unique organ, found only in mammals, that allows the mother to provide a very large amount of nutrients to her offspring for an extended period of time before they are even born.

The placenta serves as an interface between the mother and the developing fetus and has three main jobs:

Attach the fetus to the uterine wall

Provide nutrients to the fetus

Allow the fetus to transfer waste products to the mother's blood

The placenta is composed of both maternal tissue and tissue derived from the embryo. The chorion is the embryonic-derived portion of the placenta. It is composed of trophoblasts, which you may remember are the cells that made up the outer cell layer of the blastocyst. You may also remember that during implantation the trophoblasts multiply in number and extend into the uterine wall. They eventually form finger-like structures called chorionic villi, which are finger-like structures of the placenta composed of embryo-derived trophoblasts. The chorionic villi are surrounded by maternal blood which comes into direct contact with the embryonic trophoblast cells. The intervillous space is the part of the placenta that surrounds the chorionic villi and contains maternal blood.

Blood Flow and Nutrients in the Placenta

The maternal blood contains nutrients and oxygen for the fetus.

placenta 2

Maternal blood flows from the mother's circulatory system, through the intervillous space and then re-enters the mother's blood vessels. Fetal blood flows from the fetus into two main arteries in the umbilical cord, through the capillary network of the chorionic villi and is returned to the fetus by the umbilical vein. The maternal blood that enters the placenta is nutrient and oxygen rich.

A growing fetus obviously requires lots of nutrients and oxygen that it cannot provide for itself, so the fetal blood that flows through the capillaries of the chorionic villi is nutrient and oxygen poor. Because of this disparity in the nutrient and oxygen concentration between the fetal blood in the villi and the maternal blood in the intervillous space, nutrients and oxygen diffuse from the maternal blood, into the villi and into the fetal blood.

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