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it depends upon to which placenta your are referring if you are talking about the placenta of humans or mammals, none that i am aware in normal practice. however it is done occasionally, but not in something you would purchase. you could eat placenta without harm, but you would have to harvest it and prepare it yourself referring to plants - the membrane surround the seeds of a plant is also known as placenta , in that usage, legumes, peppers, and others where the entire fruiting body is consumed you would be eating placenta from the wikipedia - Capsaicin is present in large quantities in the placental tissue (which holds the seeds), ...
That tissue is called as placenta. Both fetal and maternal blood come very close to each other here and does not mix. Blood of both is separated by very thin membrane with fairly large surface area.
The herb contains two potentially dangerous alkaloids called harman and harmaline. In large amounts, these chemicals may stimulate the tissue of the uterus.
The uterus has thick walls because a fertilized egg would need a thick lining in order to implant and begin to grow and develop. The uterus is sterile and has no bacteria present, however large quantities of debris and bacteria is brought into the uterus with the sperm. Therefore, the walls must be strong and muscular because uterine contraction has to occur to expel fluid, dead sperm and bacteria out from the uterus and through the open cervix.
The size of a normal uterus depends on the animal it belongs to. A human uterus will be larger than a dog's for example.
A female horse's reproductive tract is much more like a human's, with a uterus designed to carry a single foal at a time. The uterine body is large and the uterine horns are relatively short. A female dog's uterus is essentially Y shaped and designed to carry multiple puppies. Each puppy has it's own placenta.
Adipose tissue is fat tissue, lipids are therefore present in large amounts.
The process of rapture of placenta is known as placental abruption.The following are the consequences :If a large amount of placenta is separates from uterus, the baby will probably be in distress until delivery and may die in utero,thus resulting in a stillbirthThe baby may be premature and need to be placed in the newborn intensive care unit.He or she might have problems with breathing and feeding.If the baby is in distress in the uterus,he or she may have a low level of oxygen in the blood after birth.the newborn may have low blood pressure or a low blood count cIf the separation is severe enough,the baby could suffer brain damage or die before or shortly after birth.
She will have a large dark-red mass sticking out of her back end immediately under her tail. This dark mass would have warty-looking nodules on it, which is what is found in the inside of a cow's uterus. These nodules are called caruncles and are what are responsible for the attachment of the placenta to the uterine wall. Some uterine prolapses are complete in that the whole large mass is hanging out the back end. Other prolapses are incomplete where the uterus is partly out. In any case, you MUST get the vet out immediately to assess whether the cow can be saved and to push the uterus back in. If left too long out coyotes can start chewing on it, and this means that the cow is better off slaughtered than saved.
Cecum or Caecum? it's a tissue in the large intestine...
Connective tissue
large intestine is located behind your stomach and on upper side of uterus