Diffusion in pregnancy refers to the process by which substances, such as nutrients and gases, move from areas of higher concentration to areas of lower concentration across biological membranes. This is crucial for fetal development, as oxygen and essential nutrients diffuse from maternal blood into the placenta and then to the fetus, while waste products diffuse from the fetus back into the maternal circulation for elimination. The efficiency of diffusion is influenced by factors such as the surface area and thickness of the placental barrier. Ensuring proper diffusion is vital for the health and growth of the developing fetus.
contagious diffusion, relocation diffusion, expansion diffusion, stimulus diffusion, hierarchical diffusion.
diffusion
simple diffusion, osmosis and facilitated diffusion.
The difference between diffusion and facilitated diffusion is that facilitated diffusion is that the molecules pass through special protein channels.
Diffusion is the process of spreading new ideas from culture to culture. Examples of diffusion include the use of cars and the smelting of iron. There are five main types of diffusion they are: Expansion diffusion, Relocation diffusion, Hierarchal diffusion, Congious diffusion and Stimulus diffusion.
diffusion
Diffusion of AIDS is an example of contagious diffusion, where the disease spreads through direct or indirect contact between individuals.
Diffusion
diffusion of Confucianism is where it difuses
Relocation diffusion.
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Diffusion is the process of spreading something more widely. It can be the diffusion of Homo Sapiens from the plains of Africa, the diffusion of a drop of ink in a bucket of water, diffusion of the use of smart phones.