Cardiac Development Highlights Flashcards

1
Q

When does embryo vascular system begin to develop? Why?

A

Middle of the 3rd week when the embryo is no longer able to obtain nutrients by diffusion

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2
Q

Dextrocardia

A

displacement of the heart to the right as a result of heart tube bending to the left instead of the right

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3
Q

Ectopia Cordis

associated w/

A

heart being exposed on the surface of the thorax

associated w/ patent pericardium

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4
Q

Probe Patent Foramen Ovale

A

foramen ovale big enough for a probe to be passed through

result of incomplete adhesion b/w flap of foramen ovale & septum secundum

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5
Q

Secundum type ASD

A

septum primum & septum secundum defects

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6
Q

What is one of the most common types of septum defects?

A

Secundum type ASD

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7
Q

Endocardial Cushion defect w/ primum ASD

A

endocardial cusions fail to completely fuse

results in patent foramen primum & central heat defect

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8
Q

What fails to form as a result of patent ductus arteriosus?

A

ligamentum arteriosum

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9
Q

Membranous Septal Defects

A

interventricular foramen doesn’t close

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10
Q

Persistent truncus arteriosus:

What fails to form?
Result?
Symtoms?

A

aorticopulmonary septum fails to form

Single vessel will give rise to pulmonary trunk and descending aorta

Result: mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood

Severe cyanosis

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11
Q

Embryological cause of ectopia cordis

A

failed fusion of lateral body wall folds in the midline

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12
Q

Abnormal neural crest cell migration symptoms

A

enlarged right ventricle
“boot” shaped heart
cyanosis

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13
Q

venous type ASD

A

defects along superior aspect of IA septum

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14
Q

aorticopulmonary septal defect

A

opening in the septum (aortic window)

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15
Q

Abnormal septation of the sinus venosus symptoms

A

cyanosis, tachycardia

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16
Q

sinus venosus

A

deficiency of atrial septum

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17
Q

Patent Ducts Arteriosus

Associated w/ what infection?

A

failure of the ductus arteriosus to close so blood is shunted to the pulmonary trunk

Rubella

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18
Q

Transposition of the great vessels

Associated w/ what maternal disease?

A

aorta arises from the right ventricle, pulmonary trunk arises from the L ventricle

associated with maternal diabetes

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19
Q

Tetralogy of Fallot

Associated with what disease?

A

associated group of cardiac defects (POVR’t)

  1. pulmonary stenosis
  2. overriding aorta
  3. ventricular septal defect
  4. right ventricular hypertrophy

DiGeorge Syndrome

20
Q

Most frequent cardiac defect?

A

ventricular septum defects

21
Q

Ventricular septal defect

Clinical implication?

A

hole in the septum that separates the R and L ventricles

VSD allows oxygen rich and poor blood to mix

22
Q

3rd aortic arch gives rise to

A

carotid arteries (common, external, internal)

23
Q

4th aortic arch gives rise to

A

aorta and subclavian arteries

24
Q

How is coarction combated?

A

administering of prostaglandin E2

25
Q

Most significant tetralogy of fallot symptom?

A

cyanosis

26
Q

Coarction effect on pulses

A

postductal leads to weaker pulses in the lower extremities

normal radial pulses and delayed femoral pulses & pressure will be detected

27
Q

What CVD is associated with maternal rubella?

A

pulmonary artery stenosis

patent ductus stenosis

28
Q

Removal of cardiac neural crest cells before migration

A

impairs cardiac looping; conotruncal septation is incomplete

29
Q

Ablation of cardiac neural crest cells

A

causes persistent truncus arteriosis, tricuspid stenosis, VSD, transposition of great vessels, and tetralogy of fallot

30
Q

When does the embryo vascular system begin to develop?

A

In the middle of the 3rd week when it’s no longer able to obtain nutrients by diffusion

31
Q

What are the great vessels?

A
vitelline vessels 
umbilical vessels 
cardinal vein 
dorsal aorta 
endocardial heart tube
32
Q

cardinal vein f(x)

A

drain blood from the embryo proper

33
Q

endocardial heart tubes

where do they develop?

what will they become? how?

A

in lateral splanchnic mesoderm

will form the heart
by fusing during transverse folding of the embryonic disc

34
Q

Primitive cardiogenic area

A

a horseshoe shaped plexus with mesoderm that undergoes angiogenesis

35
Q

sinus venosus f(x)

A

venous inflow channels

36
Q

Heart rotation

A

90 degrees counter clockwise simultaneously with bulboventricular looping

37
Q

Endocardial cushion f(x)

A

divide the AV canal into the right and left AV canal

38
Q

Septum Primum

A

crescent shaped membrane that grows from roof & posterior wall of primitive atrium toward the endocardial cushions

39
Q

What is the “flap” that closes the foramen ovale?

A

septum primum

40
Q

How does the foramen ovale close?

A

elevated L atrial pressure forces the septum primum against the septum secundum, closing the foramen ovale

41
Q

What closes the ductus arteriosus?

A

indomethacin (NSAID)

42
Q

Which type of VSD is the most common?

A

membranous ventricular septal defect (VSD)

43
Q

Angiogenesis

A

formation of blood vessels from existing vessels

44
Q

Describe the process of angiogenesis in the development of primitive circulation

A

angioblasts proliferate and aggregate into blood islands

45
Q

What are hemangioblasts? What will they differentiate into?

A

cells that develop from endothelial cells that will differentiate into hemocytoblasts