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)
What are the 7 main stages in the embryonic development of the heart?
When do these stages occur?
1) Formation of the heart (endocardial) tube
2) Folding and looping of the heart tube
3) Partitioning of the common AV canal
4) Formation of papillary muscles, chorda tendinea and AV valves
5) Formation of the interventricular septum
6) Formation of the interatrial septum
7) Spiral partitioning of the conus cordis and truncus arteriosus
- These stages occur concurrently (at the same time), not one after the other
How can early embryonic development be sustained?
When does the bilaminar disc become trilaminar?
What process is this?
What are the 3 layers?
How long is the embryo at this point?
- Early embryonic development can be sustained by diffusion of nutrients
- The bilaminar disc becomes trilaminar (gastrulation) in the early stages of development (only 2 weeks post conception)
- The 3 layers are ectoderm, endoderm, and mesoderm, which are formed during the 3rd week
- The embryo is 1.5mm long at this point
What becomes insufficient in the embryo?
What system if the first to 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
When does the heart begin to develop?
What are the 5 steps in the first stages of the development of the endocardial tube?
- Heart development starts at about day 18
- First stage of endocardial tube development (day 18):
1) Lateral plate mesoderm divides into visceral and parietal layers
2) in the visceral layer, there are clusters of angiogenic cells which can develop into organs and vessels
3) These clusters can join together to form blood islands
4) These blood islands can develop into vessels
5) Around the anterior and lateral portions of the neural plate, blood islands join together to form a horseshoe shape
what happens around day 17?
how are blood islands formed?
- splanchnic lateral plate mesoderm produces angiogenic cells
- they take the form of heamangioblasts
- they undergo vascularisation to make a cluster of cells called blood islands?
what are the causes of heart defects?
- genetic
- teratogenic
what cells will cause heart and facial defects?
neural crest cells (cardiac malformations)
What 7 steps occurs during the 2nd stage of endocardial tube development?
- 2nd stage of endocardial tube development:
1) Blood islands join and form the left and right endocardial tubes
2) There are also right and left dorsal aorta
3) Part of the mesoderm differentiates into myocardial cells
4) At around day 20, the visceral layers of the lateral plate mesoderm start to approach each other during lateral folding
5) When these layers approach each other, so do the endocardial tubes, which end up side by side
6) Cephalo-caudal folding also occurs simultaneously to lateral folding, and causes the heart tube to effectively migrate from the head end of the embryo, through the neck and in to the thorax
7) Cephalocaudal and lateral foldings fuse at the midline, enclose body walls, and form body cavities
what forms on day 20?
two sides of the horse shoe fuse to form single heart tube
- ventral to gut tube
- separated from somatic lateral plate mesoderm by pericardial cavity.
What 2 steps occurs during the 3rd stage of endocardial tube development?
- 2 steps occur during the 3rd stage of endocardial tube development (21 days):
1) Once the folds of the embryo fuse along the ventral midline, the space between the visceral and parietal lateral plate mesoderm is now enclosed, this space is called the intra-embryonic coelom
* The intraembryonic coelom will become the pericardium/pericardial cavity in week 5
2) There is a layer of myocardium deep to the visceral layer of lateral plate mesoderm
in what direction does the heart move during development?
- heart moves inferiorly from superior to oropharyngeal membrane into future thorax.
What 3 steps occurs during the 4th stage of endocardial tube development?
- 2 steps occur during the 4th stage of endocardial tube development?
1) The 2 endocardial tubes, cardiac jelly, and the surrounding myocardium come together in the thoracic region to form the common endocardial tube in the midline
2) Around day 22, the myocardial cells start to generate electrical impulses and beat
on day 22, what happens in the primary heart tube?
- myocardial cells infiltrate cardiac jelly
- begin contraction and electrical activity
what is cardiac jelly?
extracellular matrix of loose connective tissue surrounded by myocytes
input veins into the developing heart?
- cardinal veins
- umbilical veins
- vitaline veins
(all branches of the sinus venosus)
what does the right and left ventricle develop from?
right = bulbs chordis (proximal part)
left = primitive ventricle
where will you find the bulboventricular flange?
in the ridge between primitive ventricle and bulbous chordis
- this starts to form a septum between the right and left ventricle