Some substances are filtered but the reason some might get through is that the placenta is connected to your baby through you so in affect any harmful substances you have eg alcohol the baby will also have
Harmful substances:
- Alcohol
- Cigarettes/nicotine
- Drugs
Nicotine, drugs,alcohol which can harm the growing fetus. All of this substances, are terratogenic and can make fetus have a retarded growth.
drugs and alcohol
drugs and alchol
Alcohol
pass across the placenta
http://www.xula.edu/cop/documents/OTCDrugsinPregnancy.pdf In table 4 the paper state that the ingredients do cross the placenta and thus are NOT recommended for usage during pregnancy. They do not have specific data to state if it harms the fetus or not.
No.
Not to the woman but the embryo dies of course.
Many people have mistaken ideas about how a growing embryo eats and breathes in the uterus.From the earliest stages of its development, the growing embryo requires nutrition and oxygen, and a disposal system for the waste products of its own metabolism. All of this is accomplished by the placenta, which allows the growing embryo to eat and breathe while in the mother's uterus.To get some perspective on how the placenta began, let's go back to Day 8. This hollow ball of cells moving through the uterus is the blastocyst, searching for an implantation site. Here you see its outer layer beginning to extend out and implant in the uterine lining, searching for the uterine blood vessels that would nourish it throughout the pregnancy.As it went deeper, a single layer of cells from the mother's uterine lining surrounded it, so that it would be protected from harm. On Day 9, as it grew larger and more complex, the blastocyst became an embryo. Here it's about the size of a pinhead.Also on Day 9, the outer layer of the embryo developed spaces called lacunae. The lacunae filled up with blood from the mother's uterine lining.On Day 13, small projections from the embryo's chorionic layer reached out into the uterine lining. The chorionic layer is one of the membranes that surround the embryo and help it implant.On Days 15 through 21, blood vessels began to form beneath this chorionic layer.Around Day 21, the embryo's blood stream and the mother's blood stream were in such close contact that nutrients and oxygen could cross from mother to embryo. This was how the embryo first got its food and air from the mother, and technically this is when the placenta began to function.Let's magnify this area so you can see what we're talking about. Here you see a vein and an artery from the embryo in close contact with the blood in the mother's uterine lining. Inside the blood vessels, you can also see red blood cells, which carry oxygen.The two blood streams are separated by a thin collection of tissues in the placenta called the blood barrier. This barrier permits small particles like nutrients and oxygen to pass from the mother to the embryo, (pause) and allows waste products to pass from the embryo back to the mother. The blood barrier also prevents many large or potentially harmful particles from entering the embryo's blood stream. Notice that the red blood cells do not cross from the mother's blood stream to the embryo's.You may be wondering how a mother's blood cells could be harmful to her growing baby, and why it's important to keep the two blood streams separate. If the mother's blood type is RH negative, and her embryo's blood type is RH positive, then the mother's antibodies would treat the embryo as an invading foreign organism, and try to destroy it.Now you can see why the placenta and its blood barrier are important for supplying the growing embryo with nutrition and oxygen, removing its waste products, and preventing harmful substances from getting into its blood stream.Reviewed ByReview Date: 09/16/2008Dan Sacks MD, FACOG, Obstetrics & Gynecology in Private Practice, West Palm Beach, FL. Review provided by VeriMed Healthcare Network.
Soda wont harm you or change the bleeding one bit.
See the link bellow.
See the link bellow.
Do you mean can intercourse cause harm to the developing embryo? If a woman has unprotected sex with more than one man, the sperm that was in the vagina and uterus first - will spread a type of antibodies to fight off the new sperm, this happens prior to conception. Soon after conception your progesterone levels start rising to protect the developing embryo. This will cause the cervix to produce a mucous plug that has antibodies, which prevent germs, viruses and even sperm from gaining access to the baby and the placenta.
No, sex is safe during pregnancy.
people disagree with embryo screening because after finding out if their embryo has a genetic disorder (e.g cystic fibrosis or Huntington's disease) they may wish to abort it. the procedure may also cause possible harm to the mother or child.
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), ...