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![]() a fee-based online consultation clinic for Obstetrics & Gynecology    
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OBSTETRICS
Female Anatomy
Menstruation
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The unsuccessful sperms slowly degenerate. They break down and become indistinguishable from any other protein end product in the female partner’s body (the sperm is made up mainly of protein). These get absorbed into the blood stream and are carried away to be expelled from the body in the stool or the urine.
The sperm that manages to penetrate the ovum fuses with it to form a single cell called a zygote. The zygote starts to divide as it is propelled towards the uterus – dividing first into 2 cells, then into 4 then into 8 and so on. As soon as the zygote starts to divide it is called an embryo.
When the process of in-vitro fertilization (IVF) is carried out, the ovum and the sperm is allowed to fertilize in a laboratory dish (petri dish). The embryo is usually transferred into the mother’s uterus at the 4 – 8 celled stage, usually on the third day after fertilization.
By the time the zygote reaches the uterus at about the 6th to 9th day after ovulation, it is a 16-celled cluster of cells called a morula. The morula looks rather like a bunch of grapes. Each of its cells is identical to each other.
Theoretically, it is from the 2-celled to the 16-celled stages that the cells can be separated from each other and allowed to develop into clones of each other (identical twins). In nature, separation occurs spontaneously – usually at the 2-celled stage – to form identical twins. Separation at later stages can lead to the potentially fatal condition of conjoint twins or Siamese twins.
When it reaches the uterus, the morula sticks to the inner lining of the uterus (called the ‘endometrium’). By this time, the hormone progesterone released by the ovaries finishes preparing the endometrium to receive the morula.
The morula burrows deep into the endometrium and by the 9th - 12th day after ovulation, is fully buried in it. This burrowing can cause a little bleeding called ‘implantation bleeding’. The buried embryo then begins to develop, its cells increasing in number and gradually becoming different from each other in the way they function.
The development of the embryo continues until at the end of 9th months of pregnancy (40 weeks or 280 days), a fully formed baby, capable of leading a life independent from its mother is ready to be born.
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OTHER TOPICS IN NORMAL PREGNANCY:
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