Development of the Heart and Great Arteries Flashcards
Learning outcomes
- Describe the normal development of the chambers and valves of the heart
- Describe the formation of the foramen ovale and the changes that occur at the time of birth that lead to the formation of the fossa ovalis
- Discuss how the complex development of the heart can lead to congenital abnormalities
- Describe what is meant by patent ductus arteriosus
- Describe what is meant by patent foramen ovale
- Describe the complex organisation of the aortic arches and how it relates to the position of the recurrent laryngeal nerves
- Discuss major congenital defects in the heart (ASD, Patent FO, VSD,) and major vessels (Tetralogy of Fallot, Transposition of the great vessels, Patent ductus arteriosus Coarctation of aorta)
Discuss the basics of heart defects
(8 in 1,000)
• Causes - genetic and teratogenic
• Effects depend on timing of exposure
• Defects will often be multifactorial
– Rubella virus, social drugs, thalidomide, insulin-dependant diabetes, hypertension
– Genetic syndromes such as Downs, DiGeorge, trisomy 18
– Craniofacial abnormalities are linked to cardiac malformation (neural crest cells)
What key features/events should you be aware of in regards to the development of the heart?
- Formation of the 3 germ layers (trilaminar disc): ectoderm; endoderm; mesoderm
- Formation of the primitive heart tube (in the mesoderm)
- Folding and looping of the heart tube
- Septum formation in the common atrium
- Endocardial cushions and the atrioventricular canal
- Septum formation in the ventricles
- Septum formation in the truncus arteriosus
- Growth of atria and ventricles
- Valve formation
Early embryonic development can be sustained by diffusion of nutrients
In what process does the bilaminar disc become trilaminar?
gastrulation
Describe the process around gastrulation
The bilaminar disc becomes trilaminar (gastrulation) in the early stages of development (only 2 weeks post conception) and the 3 layers are ectoderm; endoderm; and mesoderm that are formed during the 3rd week
The embryo is 1.5 mms long!
Discuss the formation of the heart tube
The Heart Tube forms in the mesoderm from angiogenetic clusters, as a horseshoe at the cephalic end of the trilaminar disc
When and why does the cardiovascular system develop?
As the embryo grows diffusion is no longer sufficient to provide nutrients and development of both blood and vascular structures becomes necessary
The vascular system is the first system to develop in the embryo
By day 18 there is the beginning of heart development
How does the cardiovascular system begin development?
Development begins as angiogenetic clusters coalesce to form a horseshoe in the mesoderm
As a result of folding of the disc the two limbs of the horseshoe fuse to form a single heart tube that lies in the thorax and initially consists of endothelial cells only
The tube has an inflow (venous) and an outflow (arterial) end The trilaminar disc folds in 2 directions
In what directions does the trilaminar disc fold?
Ceohalo-caudal and
Lateral folding
Describe trilaminar folding in relation to cardiovascular development
Starts towards the end of 3rd week i.e. at about 18 days
Head and tail folds meet 2 lateral folds at umbilicus
The lateral folding swings the 2 limbs of the horseshoe medially so that they fuse as a single heart tube
Discuss the early development heart tube
Cephalo-caudal folding causes the heart tube to effectively migrate from the head end of the embryo, through the neck and in to the thorax (note nerve supply). It elongates and develops:
• Epicardium- Visceral pericardium
• Myocardium Cardiac muscle
• Endocardium Endothelial lining
Note the position of the heart tube, and its arterial and venous ends as it elongates and folds or loops (look at diagram)
Describe the looping and folding at about 22 days (early week 4)
The 2 “ends” fold towards each other and to the right, pushing the “apex” of the loop to the left, and rotating slightly so that the right side of the heart tends to be more anterior
(If the “ends” fold to the left, the developing heart is pushed to the right - Dextrocardia)
What occurs at 28 days?
The developing heart pushes in to the pericardial sac; the ventricles begin to trabeculate
Describe the state of the heart at 28 days?
The venous end (inflow) receives blood from the cardinal, umbilical and vitelline veins; it comes to lie behind the arterial end (outflow)
(In the fully developed heart the atria and great veins are behind the ventricles and the roots of the great arteries.)
The atrium bulges out on each side of the bulbus cordis
The proximal part of the bulbus cordis will form the RV The middle part forms the outflow of the ventricles The distal part forms the PT and Aorta
Between the atrium and ventricle is a narrowing - the atrioventricular canal
Septation and Growth must occur next
What is the purpose of endocardial cushions?
Bending itself causes narrowing, which is augmented by endocardial cushion growth