NO. Look up what a placenta is, and how it is used as a carrier for nutrients from mother to fetus. The fetus itself is going to be made up of proteins, carbs, all the elements that make up the human body, etc, hence that when rubbed into your hair, I highly doubt that such elements will have any effect whatsoever, other than a placebo. A healthy diet, good circulation, so that oxygen is being transported to the extremities is probably much more important, than rubbing in, a ground up placenta. Perhaps look up the physiology of a hair follicle, the scalp, and discover how nutrients are obtained in a topical sense, via the scalp, and a hair particle. WHY not think this out yourself. THERE are so many experts. SURE, I could quote my credentials, but you too have credentials, aka, a brain. Just a suggestion, and not one that is marked with sarcasm. I am utterly serious. start researching yourself, join a UNI library, get access to the latest journals, as its all at your fingertips, and the professors/academics should be teaching this from the very start. THERE is a book, called, HOW TO READ A BOOK. YET again I am utterly seriously, we have been dumbed down, and for what. SO an elite bunch can earn the big bucks, think they know STUFF, and usually dont go into this WACKY NOTION, that you and me, are not that different at all. SO thats my answer. HOPE IT HELPED.
Placenta previa, placenta accreta, placenta increta, and placenta increta are all conditions stemming from abnormal implantation of the placenta.
Placenta comes out after each kitten.
The umbilical cord is attached to the placenta and the placenta is attached to the wall of the uterus
Yes. But the movement is relative. Placenta does not change the position. But lower placenta may move up. So that placenta previa may become normal placenta.
Yes kangaroos have a placenta.
Placenta Previa
No, a placenta attached to the front and back of the uterus is not considered placenta previa. Placenta previa specifically refers to a condition where the placenta partially or completely covers the cervix. In contrast, a placenta that is attached to the front (anterior) and back (posterior) of the uterus may be referred to as a bilobed or multilobed placenta, but it does not indicate previa unless it is obstructing the cervical opening.
"Unremarkable placenta" means there was nothing special, different, or noteworthy about the placenta being examined.
Placenta previaThat is called "placenta previa".placenta previaPlacenta previaplacenta previa
Placenta abruptio or placental abruption is abnormal separation of the placenta from the uterine wall.
No, babies do not poop in the placenta. Babies receive nutrients and oxygen from the placenta through the umbilical cord, and waste products are removed through the mother's circulation via the placenta. Fetal waste is not stored in the placenta.
The placenta can be located anywhere in the uterus.