π Oogenesis
(Important for Anatomy & Physiology, OBG Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, AIIMS, NORCET, GPSC Staff Nurse Exams)
β 1. Introduction / Definition:
Oogenesis is the process by which the female gametes (ova or eggs) are produced and matured in the ovaries.
β 2. Location:
β 3. Phases of Oogenesis:
Oogenesis occurs in three major phases:
πΉ A. Multiplication Phase (Fetal Life):
πΉ B. Growth Phase:
πΉ C. Maturation Phase (Puberty to Menopause):
Each menstrual cycle:
β 4. Completion of Meiosis II:
β 5. Summary of Oogenesis Process:
Stage | Cell Type | Process | Fate |
Fetal life | Oogonia β Primary oocyte | Mitosis | Arrest in prophase I |
Puberty | Primary oocyte β Secondary oocyte + 1st polar body | Meiosis I | Monthly after puberty |
Fertilization | Secondary oocyte β Ovum + 2nd polar body | Meiosis II | Only if fertilized |
β 6. Differences from Spermatogenesis:
Feature | Oogenesis | Spermatogenesis |
Time begins | Before birth | Puberty |
Completion | Only if fertilized | Continuous |
Output | 1 ovum + 3 polar bodies | 4 sperm |
Arrest phases | Prophase I & Metaphase II | None |
β 7. Hormonal Regulation:
β 8. Clinical Significance:
β 9. Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:
β 10. MCQs for Practice:
Q1. Oogenesis begins during:
a) Puberty
b) Embryonic life
c) Menopause
d) Ovulation
Correct Answer: b) Embryonic life
Rationale: Oogonia form and begin meiosis I during fetal development.
Q2. The primary oocyte is arrested in which stage of meiosis?
a) Metaphase I
b) Anaphase II
c) Prophase I
d) Telophase I
Correct Answer: c) Prophase I
Rationale: Primary oocytes remain in prophase I until puberty.
Q3. Completion of meiosis II occurs only if:
a) Menstruation occurs
b) LH surge happens
c) Fertilization occurs
d) Ovulation occurs
Correct Answer: c) Fertilization occurs
Rationale: Without fertilization, meiosis II is not completed.
Q4. What is the product of the first meiotic division in oogenesis?
a) Ovum
b) Secondary oocyte and first polar body
c) Primary oocyte
d) Corpus luteum
Correct Answer: b) Secondary oocyte and first polar body
Rationale: Meiosis I yields one functional secondary oocyte and one polar body.
Q5. Total number of ova formed from one primary oocyte is:
a) Four
b) Two
c) One
d) Three
Correct Answer: c) One
Rationale: Only one ovum is produced; others become polar bodies.
π Spermatogenesis
(Important for Anatomy & Physiology, Reproductive System, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, AIIMS, NORCET, GPSC Staff Nurse Exams)
β 1. Introduction / Definition:
Spermatogenesis is the process of formation of mature male gametes (spermatozoa) from primitive germ cells (spermatogonia) in the seminiferous tubules of the testes.
It begins at puberty and continues throughout life.
β 2. Site of Spermatogenesis:
β 3. Phases of Spermatogenesis:
It occurs in 3 main phases, followed by spermiogenesis:
πΉ A. Multiplication Phase:
πΉ B. Growth Phase:
πΉ C. Maturation Phase (Meiosis):
Meiosis I:
Meiosis II:
β Final outcome: 1 primary spermatocyte β 4 spermatids
πΉ D. Spermiogenesis:
β 4. Duration:
β 5. Hormonal Regulation:
Hormone | Source | Role |
GnRH | Hypothalamus | Stimulates FSH and LH release |
FSH | Anterior pituitary | Stimulates Sertoli cells for spermatogenesis |
LH | Anterior pituitary | Stimulates Leydig cells β produce testosterone |
Testosterone | Leydig cells | Promotes maturation of sperm |
Inhibin | Sertoli cells | Inhibits FSH secretion |
β 6. Summary of Spermatogenesis:
Stage | Cell Type | Division | Ploidy |
1 | Spermatogonia | Mitosis | Diploid (2n) |
2 | Primary spermatocyte | Meiosis I | Diploid (2n) |
3 | Secondary spermatocytes | Meiosis II | Haploid (n) |
4 | Spermatids β Spermatozoa | Spermiogenesis | Haploid (n) |
β 7. Differences Between Spermatogenesis and Oogenesis:
Feature | Spermatogenesis | Oogenesis |
Starts | Puberty | Fetal life |
Duration | Lifelong | Ends at menopause |
Product | 4 sperm | 1 ovum + 3 polar bodies |
Meiosis completion | Continuous | Only after fertilization |
Site | Testes | Ovaries |
β 8. Clinical Significance:
β 9. Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:
β 10. MCQs for Practice:
Q1. The site of spermatogenesis is:
a) Epididymis
b) Prostate gland
c) Seminiferous tubules
d) Vas deferens
Correct Answer: c) Seminiferous tubules
Rationale: Sperm formation occurs in the seminiferous tubules of the testis.
Q2. One primary spermatocyte forms how many spermatozoa?
a) One
b) Two
c) Three
d) Four
Correct Answer: d) Four
Rationale: Meiosis I and II lead to 4 haploid spermatids.
Q3. The hormone that stimulates Leydig cells to produce testosterone is:
a) FSH
b) LH
c) GnRH
d) Inhibin
Correct Answer: b) LH
Rationale: LH targets Leydig cells to secrete testosterone.
Q4. The transformation of spermatids into spermatozoa is called:
a) Fertilization
b) Spermatogenesis
c) Spermiogenesis
d) Capacitation
Correct Answer: c) Spermiogenesis
Rationale: It is the maturation phase that gives sperm their motile structure.
Q5. Which cells provide nutrition to developing sperm cells?
a) Leydig cells
b) Sertoli cells
c) Spermatogonia
d) Acrosomal cells
Correct Answer: b) Sertoli cells
Rationale: Sertoli cells are also called “nurse cells” of the testes.
(Important for Anatomy & Physiology, Embryology, OBG Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, AIIMS, NORCET, GPSC Staff Nurse Exams)
Fertilization is the process of fusion of a male gamete (sperm) with a female gamete (ovum) to form a zygote (fertilized egg).
It marks the beginning of pregnancy and combines the genetic material from both parents (23 chromosomes each) to form a diploid cell (46 chromosomes).
Q1. Fertilization usually occurs in which part of the female reproductive system?
a) Vagina
b) Cervix
c) Uterus
d) Ampulla of fallopian tube
Correct Answer: d) Ampulla of fallopian tube
Rationale: It provides the ideal environment for sperm-egg interaction.
Q2. The enzyme that helps sperm penetrate the zona pellucida is:
a) Oxytocin
b) Hyaluronidase
c) Amylase
d) Inhibin
Correct Answer: b) Hyaluronidase
Rationale: It is released from the acrosome during the acrosomal reaction.
Q3. The cortical reaction prevents:
a) Ovulation
b) Menstruation
c) Polyspermy
d) Cleavage
Correct Answer: c) Polyspermy
Rationale: It blocks additional sperm entry after fertilization.
Q4. The union of male and female gametes results in the formation of:
a) Morula
b) Blastocyst
c) Zygote
d) Embryo
Correct Answer: c) Zygote
Rationale: The zygote is the first diploid cell formed after fertilization.
Q5. Which hormone is responsible for ovum release from the ovary?
a) FSH
b) LH
c) Estrogen
d) Progesterone
Correct Answer: b) LH
Rationale: LH surge induces rupture of the Graafian follicle (ovulation).
π Principle Events of Embryonic and Fetal Development
(Important for Embryology, OBG Nursing, GNM/BSc Nursing, NHM, AIIMS, NORCET, GPSC Staff Nurse Exams)
β 1. Introduction:
Embryonic and fetal development refers to the sequential biological events that occur from fertilization to birth. This process is divided into two main periods:
πΆ I. EMBRYONIC DEVELOPMENT (Week 1 to Week 8):
πΉ Week 1: Fertilization to Implantation
πΉ Week 2: Bilaminar Embryo Formation
πΉ Week 3: Gastrulation β Trilaminar Embryo
πΉ Week 4: Body Folding & Organ Primordia
πΉ Weeks 5β8: Organogenesis
πΆ II. FETAL DEVELOPMENT (Week 9 to Birth):
πΉ Month 3 (Weeks 9β12):
πΉ Month 4β5 (Weeks 13β20):
πΉ Month 6 (Weeks 21β24):
πΉ Month 7β9 (Weeks 25β40):
β 3. Milestones Summary Table:
Event | Time |
Fertilization | Day 0 |
Implantation | Day 6β7 |
Gastrulation (3 germ layers) | Week 3 |
Neurulation (neural tube forms) | Week 4 |
Heartbeat detectable by Doppler | Week 10β12 |
Quickening (first movement felt) | Week 18β20 |
Sex identifiable | Week 12β14 |
Surfactant begins | Week 24 |
Viability threshold | Week 24 |
Full term | Week 37β40 |
β 4. Golden One-Liners for Quick Revision:
β 5. MCQs for Practice:
Q1. Fertilization usually occurs in the:
a) Uterus
b) Cervix
c) Vagina
d) Ampulla of fallopian tube
Correct Answer: d) Ampulla of fallopian tube
Rationale: It is the most common site of fertilization.
Q2. Gastrulation and formation of three germ layers occurs in:
a) Week 2
b) Week 3
c) Week 4
d) Week 5
Correct Answer: b) Week 3
Rationale: Gastrulation begins in the third week.
Q3. First fetal movement (quickening) is felt around:
a) 8 weeks
b) 12 weeks
c) 20 weeks
d) 28 weeks
Correct Answer: c) 20 weeks
Rationale: Quickening is typically felt between 18β20 weeks in primigravida.
Q4. Surfactant production in the fetal lungs begins by:
a) 20 weeks
b) 24 weeks
c) 30 weeks
d) 36 weeks
Correct Answer: b) 24 weeks
Rationale: Surfactant begins forming around 24 weeks; essential for lung maturity.
Q5. At the end of embryonic period (8 weeks), the embryo:
a) Has a beating heart only
b) Has all major organ systems formed
c) Cannot move
d) Has no limbs
Correct Answer: b) Has all major organ systems formed
Rationale: Organogenesis is completed by the 8th week.