Editors' Picks
Great books about your topic, Embryology, selected by Encarta editors
Related Items
Encarta Search
Search Encarta about Embryology

Advertisement

Windows Live® Search Results

  • Embryology - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Embryology is the study of the development of an embryo. An embryo is defined as any organism in a stage before birth or hatching, or in plants, before germination occurs.

  • Chickscope 1.5: Explore: Embryology

    Embryology: The 21-day Chick Lifecycle. How does an egg develop from the time it is laid to the time it hatches? Come explore with us the fascinating 21-day life cycle ...

  • The Human Embryology Website

    This website contains supplemental materials for William Larsen's Human Embryology textbooks. Contents include: Animations of developmental processes

See all search results in
Windows Live® Search Results
Also on Encarta
Page 2 of 2

Embryology

Encyclopedia Article
Find | Print | E-mail | Blog It
Multimedia
Human Embryo DevelopmentHuman Embryo Development
Article Outline
V

Nutrition

A large ovum such as that of a bird or reptile contains abundant yolk, which, with the albuminous white, is sufficient to nourish the embryo until birth. The nutrients in a small ovum, however, are soon used up, and therefore the embryo must be nourished by other means. In many species the embryo is hatched at this point as a larva, a form capable of feeding itself although still lacking some of the organs of the adult form. In viviparous animals, including all mammals except the monotremes (see Monotreme), the embryo receives nourishment from the mother by diffusion through specially developed extraembryonic membranes. Marsupial, females secrete a nutrient fluid for this purpose from uterine glands. In most mammals soluble nutrients are supplied to the embryo from the bloodstream of the mother.

VI

Human Embryology

The human ovum, fertilized high in a fallopian tube, is brushed by the hairlike cilia in the tube toward the uterus, where it becomes implanted, that is, attached to and enclosed by decidual tissue of the uterine lining. Studies of primate embryos indicate that, in humans as well as in apes, cell multiplication begins during the journey of the ovum through the tube. The implanted embryo consists of a hollow sphere, the blastocyst, containing a mass of cells, called the embryonic mass, attached by a stalk to one side of the encircling membrane. In a blastocyst less than two weeks old and measuring 1 mm (0.04 in) in diameter, the microscope reveals the amnion (a sac surrounding the embryo), chorion (a membrane that develops around the amnion and lines the uterine wall), yolk sac, and distinct germ layers.

In the third week a closed tube appears in which the brain and spinal cord are to develop. Another tube, folding on itself, is developing into the heart, and at about this stage a portion of the minute yolk sac is enclosed in the body of the embryo to form a part of the embryonic alimentary canal. At the beginning of its fourth week the embryo, now about 4 to 5 mm (about 0.16 to 0.2 in) long, has the rudiments of eyes and ears, and each side of the neck shows four gill clefts. A tail is also present.

Early in the second month the buds of the arms and legs appear. The major internal organs begin to take shape, and in about the sixth week bones and muscles begin to form. By the third month the embryo is recognizable as that of a primate, and is now called a fetus. It has a definite face, with the mouth and nostrils distinct, and the external ears are forming. By the end of the eighth week the tail has usually been incorporated in the body, and in the 11th or 12th week the external genitals become evident. The human embryo is especially vulnerable to the damaging effects of X rays, of disease viruses such as measles, and of certain drugs during the fourth to the eighth week of gestation. These agents can result in the death of the embryo or in the birth of a child with deformed limbs or other abnormalities. By the fourth month an embryo has developed obvious human features. For development in the fetal stage, see Fetus. For abnormalities due to anomalous development, see Birth Defects. See also Development; Multiple Birth; Obstetrics.



Prev.
|
Next
Find
Print
E-mail
Blog It


More from Encarta


© 2008 Microsoft