In live bearing mammals, the placenta forms after the embryo
implants into the wall of the
uterus. The developing
fetus is connected to the placenta via an
umbilical cord. Mammalian placentas can be classified based on the number of tissues separating the maternal from the fetal blood. These include: ; endotheliochorial placentation : In this type of placentation, the
chorionic villi are in contact with the endothelium of maternal blood vessels. (e.g. in most
carnivores like
cats and
dogs) ; epitheliochorial placentation : Chorionic villi, growing into the apertures of uterine glands (epithelium). (e.g. in
ruminants,
horses,
whales,
lower primates,
dugongs) ; hemochorial placentation : In hemochorial placentation maternal blood comes in direct contact with the fetal
chorion, which it does not in the other two types. It may avail for more efficient transfer of nutrients etc., but is also more challenging for the systems of
gestational immune tolerance to avoid rejection of the fetus. (e.g. in
higher order primates, including
humans, and also in
rabbits,
guinea pigs,
mice, and
rats) During
pregnancy, placentation is the formation and growth of the placenta inside the uterus. It occurs after the implantation of the embryo into the uterine wall and involves the remodeling of
blood vessels in order to supply the needed amount of blood. In humans, placentation takes place 7–8 days after fertilization. In humans, the placenta develops in the following manner. Chorionic villi (from the embryo) on the embryonic pole grow, forming
chorion frondosum. Villi on the opposite side (abembryonic pole) degenerate and form the
chorion laeve (or chorionic laevae), a smooth surface. The endometrium (from the mother) over the chorion frondosum (this part of the endometrium is called the decidua basalis) forms the decidual plate. The decidual plate is tightly attached to the chorion frondosum and goes on to form the actual placenta. Endometrium on the opposite side to the decidua basalis is the decidua parietalis. This fuses with the chorion laevae, thus filling up the uterine cavity. In the case of
twins,
dichorionic placentation refers to the presence of two placentas (in all
dizygotic and some
monozygotic twins).
Monochorionic placentation occurs when monozygotic twins develop with only one placenta and bears a higher risk of complications during pregnancy. Abnormal placentation can lead to an early termination of pregnancy, for example in
pre-eclampsia.
Source-tissue types Placenta can also be divided according to what kind of structure it develops from. There are two vessel-rich features in the
amniote, the
yolk sac and the
allantois. When the chorion fuses with the former, the result is a
choriovitelline placenta. When it fuses with the latter, the result is a chorioallantoic placenta. Most mammals first form a temporaty choriovitelline placenta, then the chorioallantoic placenta takes over. (Primates do not form a definite choriovitelline placenta by fusion, but strong expression conservation suggest that the yolk sac remains useful.) Marsupials mostly have choriovitelline placental tissue. Rodents maintain both types throughout gestation. ==In lizards and snakes==