S3: development of the CVS Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the formation and looping of the primitive heart tube

A

A pair of tubes (endocardial tubes) develops within the cardiogenic field in the 3rd week
The endocardial tubes are brought together during embryonic folding and fuse in the mid-line to create the primitive heart tube
The primitive heart tube is linear at first, receiving blood (inflow) at its caudal pole and pumping blood (outflow) from its cranial pole

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2
Q

What are the four sections of the primitive heart tube?

A

Truncus arteriosus
Primitive ventricle
Primitive atrium
Sinus venosus

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3
Q

Describe the formation of the inter-atrial septum

A
  • septum primum grows downwards towards the endocardial cushions
  • gap between septum primum and endocardial cushions: ostium primum
  • septum primum continues to grow until is binds to the endocardial cushions -> undergoes apoptosis to produce ostium secondum
  • ostium secondum = blood can pass bi-directionally but only want a one-way shunt
  • this is down through the growth of the septum secondum (hole formed is now called the foramen ovale)
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4
Q

Describe the formation of interventricular septum

A

Large muscular component grows up from the ventricular wall

Small membranous portion grows down from the endocardial cushions (if something goes wrong, it is usually this part)

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5
Q

Describe the concept of right to left shunting in the foetus

A

In the foetus there are certain tissues that can be bypassed since the placenta performs their functions for them
Eg. lungs can be bypassed as foetus does not breathe air, liver

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6
Q

Describe the fate of the three foetal shunts

A

When the foetus takes its first breaths, resistance in pulmonary circulation drops and the pressure within the left atrium increases -> oval foramen closed
Foramen ovale = fossa ovalis
Ductus arteriosus = ligamentum arteriosum
Ductus venosus = ligamentum venosum

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7
Q

Describe in brief the development of the great vessels

A

Ridges of tissues form the spiral septum which grows in a helical way partitioning the blood (within the truncus arteriosus)
Separates the blood into the aorta on the left and the pulmonary arteries on the right

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8
Q

Describe what a patent ductus arteriosus is

A

Ductus arteriosus fails to close in a child -> excessive mixing of blood between pulmonary and systemic circuits

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9
Q

Describe the transposition of the great arteries

A

Origins of the aorta and pulmonary trunk and aorta are swapped (aorta comes from RV, PT comes from LV)
Spiral septum adds an extra 180 degrees to its twist (defects in neural crest cell development may contribute)
Need to use pharmacological agents to maintain the potency of the ductus arteriosus keeping it open and allowing mixing of blood

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10
Q

Describe cardiac looping of the primitive heart tube

A

The process by which the adult disposition of the heart is achieved begins with the process of looping of the primitive heart tube
Looping places both the inflow and outflow cranially with the inflow dorsal to (behind) the outflow

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11
Q

Describe which arteries are developed from which aortic arches

A

There 5 aortic arches in the embryo
Both pulmonary arteries are developed from the sixth aortic arch
The adult aortic arch is developed from the 4th aortic arches
Right subclavian artery is developed from the 4th aortic arch
Common carotid is derived from the 3rd arch and portions of the ventral aorta

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12
Q

Describe where the laryngeal nerves are in relation to the aortic arches

A

Left laryngeal nerve finds itself trapped hooked around the ductus arteriosus, but on the right side this has disappeared
Therefore, right laryngeal nerve loops around the right subclavian (sits higher up) and left laryngeal nerve loops around the arch of the aorta

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13
Q

Name the 3 important shunts in foetal circulation and their location

A
  • ductus arteriosus: pulmonary trunk to aorta
  • foramen ovale: right to left atrium
  • ductus venosus: bypass liver (blood goes straight to the inferior vena cava)
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14
Q

Describe the septation of the atrioventricular canal

A

Endocardial cushions help to separate the atria and ventricles & help support the valves stay in place (grow out from the dorsal and ventral aspects of the AV canal and separate into two halves)
This will need to fuse with the interventricular and interatrial septa = full septation of the heart

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15
Q

Describe what a patent foramen ovale is

A

Septum primum and septum secondum have failed to fuse together after birth
Can be seen in adults -> can manifest as DVT + presents as a stroke

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16
Q

Describe what a hypoplastic left heart is

A

Congenital heart defect
Inadequate blood flow from right to left (left side receiving nowhere near as much blood as it needs)
Consequence: right ventricle becomes the sole ventricle supplying both circuits (grossly enlarged pulmonary trunk)
If diagnosed pre-natally: need to prevent ducutus arteriosus from closing

17
Q

Describe the Tetralogy of Fallot

A

1) Overriding aorta
2) Pulmonary stenosis (PT is too small)
3) Right ventricular hypertrophy (gets bigger as its tries to push blood through narrow outflow)
4) Ventricular septal defect (spiral septum doesn’t line up with the endocardial cushions)