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EMBRYO DEVELOPMENT
Each human being starts as a single cell from the mother’s ovary, which is a specialized sort of cell that contains a germ with reproductive and hereditary substances, called an egg or ovum. The ovum cannot develop unless it is fertilized by a sperm from the father. Here we are on a par with the beasts of the field or the fishes of the sea. Those of you who have read Isaac Walton’s The Complete Angler will remember that he quoted the following about strawberries: “Doubtless God could have made a better berry, but doubtless God never did.” So doubtless He could have devised a better scheme than that of the two sexes to perpetuate the race, but He did not.
However, we proudly maintain that humans are different from the others – somewhat. Although the ovum, or egg, of the human female is in the beginning much the same as that of the other higher animals, the sexual activities that are concerned with the fertilization are highly characteristic with mankind. Mammals in general have a period, often only once a year, when the female will receive the male. This is called estrus, or “heat.” Human females, as is well known, will receive the male at almost any time. However, the period when they may become pregnant occurs once a month, in between the times of menstrual flow.
You all know that the human female goes through a cycle every lunar month, that is, four weeks. The visual evidence of this, menstrual flow, is, it would seem evident, associated with the attempt to prepare the uterus for pregnancy. Somewhere between two menstrual flows an ovum is freed from the ovary. Left to itself it passes down through the uterus and is lost forever. Then the blood vessels which, in anticipation of pregnancy, have been forming along the inner surface of the uterus, break down, the familiar flow of blood occurs, and the uterus returns to its original condition.
Although as a usual thing only one ovum is freed at any one period, the male sperms are present in millions after intercourse. Each of these is shaped like a tadpole and moves in a similar manner. It travels through the cavity of the uterus and along inside one of the Fallopian tubes whose open end is near the ovary. If one of these sperms joins with an ovum, it penetrates through the surface and pregnancy has occurred.
Although the ovum and the sperm meet and unite in the tube, the resultant embryo usually travels along to its proper place in the uterus. Unfortunately this does not always occur. Sometimes it stops in the tube and begins to grow there. The tube cannot respond as the uterus does and sooner or later it ruptures. This causes severe pain and bleeding and a serious surgical emergency results. Occasionally the fetus remains in the abdominal cavity.
When, as usual, the fertilized ovum reaches the uterus, it attaches itself to the wall prepared for it by the changes which have been leading up to menstruation. Until recent years most knowledge of these matters was obtained from the study of animals with the reasonable supposition that in important respects some of the higher animals develop much as humans do. Some ten years or more ago Drs. John Rock and Arthur T. Hertig, of the Free Hospital for Women in Brookline, Mass., found an embryo in a woman’s uterus removed at operation. It is believed to be about seven and a half days old and is so small that it can barely be seen with the unaided eye. At this stage it was already partly buried in the uterine wall.
*2/276/5*

October 15, 2009 Post Under Anti-Infectives - Read More

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