As the follicle grows it produces certain hormones which reactive uterine wall to become thickened and to be supplied with a lot of blood. This change is a kind of preparation of the uterus to receive the fertilized egg and to provide for the development of the future embryo
i think its a little bit heavy of the uterus
The "endometrium" is the inside lining of the uterus. A follicle is a premature egg that has not yet been fertilized by sperm.
When your body is ready for periods, the lining of your uterus thickens in preparation for a potential pregnancy. Hormonal changes cause an egg to be released from one of your ovaries, and if it is not fertilized, the lining of the uterus is shed as menstrual flow.
i don't know. can you tell me. Actual answer> The follicle or polar cells (3 unwanted cells from miosis) detach from the ovum (egg) which is ovulation. The follicle then becomes the corpus luteum which produces the hormone progesterone, this maintains the uterus lining preventing it from being shed.
i think its a little bit heavy of the uterus
The uterus lining changes in thickness during the menstrual cycle in response to hormonal levels. In the first half of the cycle, estrogen causes the lining to thicken in preparation for a potential pregnancy. If fertilization does not occur, estrogen levels drop and the lining sheds during menstruation.
The menstrual cycle is a series of hormonal changes in which an egg matures and is released and the uterine lining thickens so that the egg, if fertilized, can implant in it. Menstruation happens when the uterine lining sheds because no fertilized egg has implanted.
When the yellow body (corpus luteum) degenerates and withers away, the lining of the uterus breaks down and menstruation occurs.
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Once the follicle erupts and the egg escapes, it enters the fallopian tube. Cilia on the lining of the fallopian tubes push the egg along on it's way to the uterus. If the egg is fertilized while on its way to the uterus, it implants in the endometrium when it reaches the uterus. If it is not fertilized, it is shed in the monthly menstruation cycle.
The ovarian phase that corresponds with the proliferative phase in the uterus is the follicular phase. It is characterized by follicle development in the ovary and an increase in estrogen levels, which triggers the thickening of the endometrial lining in the uterus in preparation for implantation.