Gastrointestinal- Embriology, Flashcards

1
Q

Normal gastrointestinal embryology

  • Foregut
  • Midgut
  • Hindgut
A

esophagus to upper duodenum

lower duodenum to proximal 2/3 of transverse colon.

distal 1/3 of transverse colon to anal canal above pectinate line.

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2
Q

Midgut development:

A

ƒƒ 6th week—physiologic midgut herniates through umbilical ring
ƒƒ 10th week—returns to abdominal cavity + rotates around superior mesenteric artery (SMA), total 270° counterclockwise.

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3
Q

Ventral wall defects

A

Failure of rostral fold closure (eg, sternal defects [ectopia cordis]),

Lateral fold closure (eg, omphalocele, gastroschisis)

Caudal fold closure (eg, bladder exstrophy)

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4
Q

Gastroschisis

  • Etiology
  • Covered
  • Associations
A

Extrusion of abdominal contents through abdominal folds (typically right of umbilicus).

Not covered by peritoneum or amnion;

Not associated with chromosome abnormalities

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5
Q

Omphalocele

  • Etiology
  • Covered
  • Associations
A

Failure of lateral walls to migrate at umbilical ring Ž persistent midline herniation of abdominal contents into umbilical cord.

Surrounded by peritoneum

Associated with congenital anomalies (eg, trisomies 13 and 18, Beckwith-Wiedemann syndrome) and other structural abnormalities (eg, cardiac, GU, neural tube)

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6
Q

Congenital umbilical hernia

A

Failure of umbilical ring to close after physiologic herniation of the intestines. Small defects usually close spontaneously

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7
Q

Tracheoesophageal anomalies

  • Clinical features
  • Diagnosis
A

Neonates drool, choke, and vomit with first feeding. TEFs allow air to enter stomach (visible on CXR). Cyanosis is 2° to laryngospasm (to avoid reflux-related aspiration).

Clinical test: failure to pass nasogastric tube into stomach.

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8
Q

Tracheoesophageal anomalies

- Types

A

In H-type, the fistula resembles the letter H. In pure EA, CXR shows gasless abdomen.

Esophageal atresia (EA) with distal tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF) is the most common (85%) and often presents as polyhydramnios in utero.

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9
Q

Intestinal atresia

- Clinical features

A

Presents with bilious vomiting and abdominal distension within first 1–2 days of life.

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10
Q

Intestinal atresia

- Duodenal atresia

A

failure to recanalize. Associated with “double bubble” (dilated stomach, proximal duodenum) on x-ray ). Associated with Down syndrome

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11
Q

Intestinal atresia

- Jejunal and ileal atresia

A

disruption of mesenteric vessels Ž ischemic necrosis Ž segmental resorption (bowel discontinuity or “apple peel”).

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12
Q

Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

- Clinical features

A

Most common cause of gastric outlet obstruction in infants (1:600). Palpable olive-shaped mass in
epigastric region, visible peristaltic waves, and nonbilious projectile vomiting at ∼ 2–6 weeks old.

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13
Q

Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis

  • Associations
  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
A

associated with exposure to macrolides. Results in hypokalemic hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis.

Ultrasound shows thickened and lengthened pylorus

Treatment is surgical incision (pyloromyotomy).

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14
Q

Pancreas embriology

A

Derived from foregut.

Ventral pancreatic buds contribute to uncinate process and main pancreatic duct.

The dorsal pancreatic bud alone becomes the body, tail, isthmus, and accessory pancreatic duct.

Both the ventral and dorsal buds contribute to pancreatic head

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15
Q

Annular pancreas

A

Abnormal rotation of ventral pancreatic bud forms a ring of pancreatic tissue Ž encircles 2nd part of duodenum; may cause duodenal narrowing and vomiting.

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16
Q

Pancreas divisum

A

ventral and dorsal parts fail to fuse at 8 weeks. Common anomaly; mostly asymptomatic, but may cause chronic abdominal pain and/or pancreatitis.

17
Q

Spleen Embriology

A

Arises in mesentery of stomach (hence is mesodermal) but has foregut supply (celiac trunk Ž splenic artery).