Placenta.ppt

REKHAKHARE 1,287 views 22 slides Sep 27, 2023
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About This Presentation

general description of placenta
types of placental pathology


Slide Content

DR REKHAKHARE
MDRADIOLOGY
The Placenta

Placenta
•Theplacentais a temporaryembryonicand
laterfetalorganthat beginsdevelopingfrom
theblastocystshortly after implantation
•The placenta isan organ that develops in the uterus during
pregnancy.
•This structure provides oxygen and nutrients to a growing
baby. It also removes waste products from the baby's blood
•The placenta attaches to the wall of the uterus, and the
baby's umbilical cord arises from it.

Types of placenta
•Posterior placenta:
The placenta grows on the back
wall of uterus
•Anterior placenta:
The placenta grows on the front wall
of uterus closer to bladder
•Fundalplacenta:
The placenta grows at the top of
uterus
•Lateral placenta:
The placenta grows on the right or
left wall of uterus

Development of placenta
•The placenta begins to develop
uponimplantationof theblastocystinto
the maternalendometrium, very early on
in pregnancy at about week 4
•The outer layer of the late blastocyst, is
formed oftrophoblasts, cells that form
the outer layer of the placenta.
•This outer layer is divided into two further
layers:
•the underlyingcytotrophoblastlayer and
the overlyingsyncytiotrophoblastlayer.
•The syncytiotrophoblast is
amultinucleatedcontinuous cell layer
that covers the surface of the placenta.
•The placenta grows throughoutpregnancy

Placenta
•The placenta grows throughoutpregnancy.
Development of the maternal blood supply to
the placenta is complete by the end of the
first trimester of pregnancy week 14

Placental circulation
•Placental circulation-maternal and
fetoplacental circulation
•maternal blood flow begins between days 5–
12,and is approximately 600–700ml/min at
term.

Feto-placental circulation
•Deoxygenated fetal blood passes throughumbilical arteriesto the
placenta. At the junction of umbilical cord and placenta, the
umbilical arteries branch radiallyto formchorionic arteries.
•Chorionic arteries, in turn, branch intocotyledon arteries.
•In the villi, these vessels eventually branch to form an extensive
arterio-capillary-venous system, bringing the fetal blood extremely
close to the maternal blood; but no intermingling of fetal and
maternal blood occurs
•("placental barrier")
•Endothelinandprostanoidscausevasoconstrictionin placental
arteries, whilenitric oxidecausesvasodilation.
•On the other hand, there is no neural vascular regulation, and
catecholamineshave only little effect.

Feto-placental circulation
•The fetoplacental circulation is vulnerable to
persistent hypoxia or intermittent hypoxia and
reoxygenation, which can lead to generation
of excessivefree radicals. This may contribute
topre-eclampsiaand otherpregnancy
complications.
•It is presumed thatmelatoninplays a role as
anantioxidantin the placenta.

Pathology of placenta
•Placenta accreta, when the placenta implants
too deeply, all the way to the actual muscle of
uterine wall (without penetrating it)
•Placenta praevia, when the placement of the
placenta is too close to or blocks thecervix
•Placental abruption, premature detachment
of the placenta
•Placentitis, inflammation of the placenta, such
as byTORCH infections

Placenta accreta
•Findings could be—
•focal thinning or absence of the myometrium
at the site of placental implantation
•a nodular interface between the placenta and
the uterus
•a mass effect of the placenta on the uterus
causing an outer bulge, heterogeneous signal
intensity within the placenta

Placenta increta and percreta
•Placenta increta is a condition where the
placenta attaches more firmly to the uterus
and becomes embedded in the organ's
muscle wall.
•Placenta percreta is a condition where
placenta attaches itself and grows through the
uterus and potentially to the nearby organs
(such as the bladder).

Placenta accreta

Placenta accreta on USG

Placenta accreta on USG

Placenta previa
•During pregnancy, the placenta provides the
growing baby with oxygen and nutrients from
the mother's bloodstream.
•Placenta previa meansthe placenta has
implanted at the bottom of the uterus, over
the cervix or close by, which means the baby
can't be born vaginally.

Placenta previa

Types of placenta previa

Placental abruption
•The placenta is an organ that develops in the
uterus during pregnancy.
•Placental abruptionoccurs when the placenta
separates from the inner wall of the uterus
before birth
•Placental abruption can deprive the baby of
oxygen and nutrients and cause heavy
bleeding in the mother.

Placental Abruption

Cause of pl abruption
•The cause is unknown in most cases,
•But risk factors may include maternal high
blood pressure, abdominal trauma and
substance misuse

Types of placental abruption
•subchorionic abruption -bleeding between
myometrium and placental membranes.
•retroplacental abruption -bleeding between
myometrium and placenta.
•preplacental abruption -bleeding between
placenta and amniotic fluid.
•intraplacental abruption.

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