Cardiovascular system: Lecture 8 - Development of the Cardiovascular System 2 Flashcards
What is dextrocardia?
Dextrocardia is a rare heart condition in which your heart points toward the right side of your chest instead of the left side
What causes dextrocardia?
Abnormal cardiac looping or may be induced during gastrulation (week 3) when laterality (left and right sides) is determined
Should the apex of the heart be pointing to the right or left?
Left
What is a ductus arteriosus?
The ductus arteriosus is a blood vessel in the developing foetus connecting the trunk of the pulmonary artery to the proximal descending aorta
It allows blood to bypass the lungs as the mother oxygenates blood for the foetus via the placenta
Why does the ductus arteriosus close soon after birth?
Due to increasing oxygen tension and a decrease in circulating prostaglandins (cells contract)
What is a patent ductus arteriosus and why is this dangerous?
Ductus arteriosus fails to close
- allows shunting of blood from aorta to pulmonary artery
- oxygenated blood travels back to the lungs then returns to the heart and has to be pumped out again (increases hearts workload)
- can lead to pulmonary hypertension (increase in BP in the pulmonary system), ventricular hypertrophy and heart failure
How do we treat patent ductus arteriosus?
Treated with prostaglandin inhibitors - could begin closing of ductus arteriosus
What are 2 causes of atrial septal defects?
- Failure of the septum primum and secundum to fuse after birth e.g if the septum sucundum just dosen’t develop enough so we have excessive apoptosis
- Malformations in the development septum primum or secundum such that they do not overlap and therefore leave a gap
So can have septal defects whether its through our foramen and secundum
What is a probe patent foramen ovale?
- occurs in 1 in 4
- usually asymptomatic
- usually, higher pressure in LA pushes septum primum against septum secundum and mecanically shuts valve
- if there is high pressure in RA e.g pulmonary hypertension, this can push flimsy septum primum open and sllow blood to shunt from right to left
- could be a risk factor for stroke/migraine
- only opens if probed
What are ostium (opening) secundum (second opening of atrial septum) defects caused by?
Can be caused by excessive apoptosis in septum primum or by inadequate development of septum secundum such as foramen ovale and foraemn secundum overlap
What occurs in ostium secundum defects?
- Due to the difference in pressure, blood flows from the left to the right - can cause enlargement of right atrium and ventricle
- small defects may be asymptomatic, however larger defects may require surgical repair
What is a common atrium?
- rare cardiac defect with complete absence of atrial septum
- failure of development of the septum primum and septum secundum
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Why is the premature closure of the foramen ovale during prenatal life a cardiac defect that usually results in death shortly after birth?
-increased amount of blood on right side (and therefore less in the left) results in hypertrophy (enlargement) of the right side of the heart and undevelopment of the left side of the heart
What are the most common congenital heart defects?
Ventricular septal defects - often associated with other congenital malformations e.g down’s syndrome
Which two different parts of the ventricle can ventricular septal defects affect?
- the muscular part of the interventricular septum (often resolves as child grows)
- membranous part of the interventricular septum