CVS Embryology 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the first arteries to appear in the heart?

A

right and left primitive aortae. each primitive aortae has a ventral aorta and a dorsal aorta.

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2
Q

How is the aortic sac formed?

A

becomes an extension of the truncus arteriosus anteriorly. its the fusion of the 2 ventral aorta

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3
Q

When are aortic arches formed and how many?

A

4th and 5th weeks. 6 arches from left and right ventral aortic sac. arch to the left and right dorsal aorta

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4
Q

what happens to the 1st and 2nd arches?

A

dissapear in early development

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5
Q

What happens to the 3rd arches?

A

becomes carotid artery on left and right side

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6
Q

What happens to the 4th arches?

A

on right, forms right subclavian artery.
on left, forms aortic arch

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7
Q

What happens to the 5th arches?

A

dissapears

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8
Q

What happens to the 6th arches?

A

6th right forms right pulmonary artery.
6th left forms left pulmonary artery and ductus arteriosus

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9
Q

What is the function of the ductus arteriosus?

A

bypasses blood from pulmonary arteries directly into aorta, as lung isn’t functioning yet.

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10
Q

What defects can occur with development of the arteries? (4)

A

right subclavian could come off left arch - constrict oesophagus or trachea

double aortic arch from 4th arch. can wrap around oesophagus and trachea - difficulty breathing and swallowing. worse than above

PDA

coarctation of aorta

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11
Q

What is PDA?

A

patent ductus arteriosus. doesnt become ligamentous due to IRDS. needs correcting or may lead to heart failure with age

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12
Q

What are the 6 inflow tracts coming into the sinus venosus?

A

sinus venosus is split in 2 - right and left.
outer are common cardinal veins
midde are umbilical veins
inner are vitelline veins

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13
Q

What is the purpose and fate of umbilical vessels?

A

supply placenta. when broken down, become internal iliac arteries and veins in adult

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14
Q

What happens to the sinus venosus outflow tracts?

A

left veins break down and form left horn. right horn loses umbilical vein, and remains with common cardinal vein and vicelline vein.

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15
Q

What is the fate of the remaining sinus venosus outflow tracts?

A

left horn becomes coronary sinus
common cardinal vein becomes superior vena cava
vicelline vein becomes inferior vena cava

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16
Q

How is the lymphatic system developed and when?

A

6 primary lymph sacs form at the end of the embryonic period. lymph vessels join in later life

17
Q

How is the thoracic duct formed?

A

2 vessels laying anteriorly to aorta, which become left and right embryonic thoracic duct.

left one becomes upper 1/3rd of adult thoracic duct
right one becomes lower 2/3rds of adult thoracic duct

18
Q

Where do umbilical arteries arise from?

A

1 from each internal iliac artery - left and right

19
Q

What do umbilical arteries do?

A

carry blood through the umbilical cord to the placenta, where it picks up O2 and nutrients, and releases Co2 and waste.

20
Q

How is highly oxygenated blood brought back into the baby’s circulation?

A

through the umbilicus, through an umbilical vein which goes through the umbilical cord.

21
Q

What happens to blood brought through umbilical vein?

A

splits into:
hepatic portal vein, taking highly oxygenated blood to liver(requirement increases with gestation), and ductus venosus, back to heart

ductus venosus - shunt for blood to enter inferor vena cava back to heart. IVC has deoxygenated blood from foetus’s lower limbs. forms mix of O2 and deO2 blood.

22
Q

What are the 3 foetal circulation shunts?

A

ductus venosus
ductus arteriosus
foramen ovale

23
Q

What is the fate of foetal circulation shunts after birth?

A

ductus venosus - ligamentum venosum
ductus arteriosus - ligamentum arteriosum
foramen ovale - fossa ovalis

24
Q

What is the fate of umbilical arteries?

A

become ligamentous. lay on anterior abdominal wall as medial umbilical ligaments.