When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Fetal membranes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_membranes

    The fetal membranes separate maternal tissue from fetal tissue at a basic mechanical level. The fetal membrane is composed of a thick cellular chorion covering a thin amnion composed of dense collagen fibrils. The amnion is in contact with the amniotic fluid and ensures structural integrity of the sac due to its mechanical strength.

  3. Why do people rarely see images like these? - AOL

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/heres-pregnancy-actually...

    Photos of what pregnancy tissue from early abortions at 5 to 9 weeks looks like have gone viral. Here's what pregnancy actually looks like before 10 weeks. Experts explain why we don't see these ...

  4. Gestational sac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gestational_sac

    The gestational sac is spherical in shape, and is usually located in the upper part (fundus) of the uterus.By approximately nine weeks of gestational age, due to folding of the trilaminar germ disc, the amniotic sac expands and occupy the majority of the volume of the gestational sac, eventually reducing the extraembryonic coelom (the gestational sac or the chorionic cavity) to a thin layer ...

  5. Amniotic sac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amniotic_sac

    The amniotic sac and its filling provide a liquid that surrounds and cushions the fetus. It is a site of exchange of essential substances, such as oxygen, between the umbilical cord and the fetus. [9] It allows the fetus to move freely within the walls of the uterus. [citation needed] Buoyancy is also provided.

  6. Position (obstetrics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Position_(obstetrics)

    In obstetrics, position is the orientation of the fetus in the womb, identified by the location of the presenting part of the fetus relative to the pelvis of the mother. . Conventionally, it is the position assumed by the fetus before the process of birth, as the fetus assumes various positions and postures during the course of chil

  7. Yolk sac - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yolk_sac

    The yolk sac is a membranous sac attached to an embryo, formed by cells of the hypoblast layer of the bilaminar embryonic disc.This is alternatively called the umbilical vesicle by the Terminologia Embryologica (TE), though yolk sac is far more widely used.

  8. Chorion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chorion

    Placenta with attached fetal membranes (ruptured at the margin at the left in the image), which consists of the chorion (outer layer) and amnion (inner layer).. The part of the chorion that is in contact with the decidua capsularis undergoes atrophy, so that by the fourth month scarcely a trace of the villi is left.

  9. Cervical effacement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cervical_effacement

    The mucus may be tinged with blood and the passage of the mucus plug is called bloody show (or simply "show"). As effacement takes place, the cervix then shortens, or effaces, pulling up into the uterus and becoming part of the lower uterine wall. Diagram showing an outline of the changes occurring during cervical ripening