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Chorionic villi

 
Medical Glossary: Chorionic villi

Microscopic, finger-like projections that emerge from the outer sac which surrounds the developing baby. Chorionic villi are of fetal origin and eventually form the placenta.

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Chorionic villi
Gray29.png
Diagram of a transverse section, showing the mode of formation of the amnion in the chick. The amniotic folds have nearly united in the middle line. Ectoderm, blue; mesoderm, red; entoderm and notochord, black. (Villi of chorion labeled at upper left.)
Gray31.png
Model of human embryo 1.3 mm. long. (Villi of chorion labeled at lower right.)
Gray's subject #12 60
Days 24
MeSH Chorionic+Villi

Chorionic villi are villi that sprout from the chorion in order to give a maximum area of contact with the maternal blood.

Embryonic blood is carried to the villi by the branches of the umbilical arteries, and after circulating through the capillaries of the villi, is returned to the embryo by the umbilical veins.

Thus, the villi are part of the border between maternal and fetal blood during pregnancy.

Contents

Development

The chorion undergoes rapid proliferation and forms numerous processes, the chorionic villi, which invade and destroy the uterine decidua and at the same time absorb from it nutritive materials for the growth of the embryo.

They undergo several stages, depending on their composition.

Stage Description Contents
Primary The chorionic villi are at first small and non-vascular. trophoblast only [1]
Secondary The villi increase in size and ramify, while the mesoderm grows into them. trophoblast and mesoderm [1]
Tertiary Branches of the umbilical vessels grow into the mesoderm, and in this way the chorionic villi are vascularized. trophoblast, mesoderm, and blood vessels [1]

Until about the end of the second month of pregnancy the villi cover the entire chorion, and are almost uniform in size, but after this they develop unequally.

Relations

The villi can also be classified by their relations:

Floating villi

These villi are found floating freely in the intervillous space. They exhibit a bi-layered epithelium consisting of cytotrophoblasts with overlaying syncytium (syncytiotrophoblast).

Anchoring (stem) villi

These villi act to stabilise mechanical integrity of the placental-maternal interface.

Tissue composition and cell types

The bulk of the villi consist of connective tissues in which blood vessels are found. Most of the cells in the connective tissue core of the villi are fibroblasts. Macrophages known as Hofbauer cells are also present.

Additional images

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Larsen, William J. : Human embryology. Sherman, Lawrence S.; Potter, S. Steven; Scott, William J. 3. ed.

External links

This article was originally based on an entry from a public domain edition of Gray's Anatomy. As such, some of the information contained herein may be outdated.



 
 

 

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