Embryo V Flashcards
What early embryonic layer is of principle concern in the genitourinary system?
- Mesoderm, specifically intermediate mesoderm
What does the intermediate mesoderm forms into?
Urogenital ridges that are located on either side of the vertebral column
What part of the urogenital ridge gives rise to for genital system?
- The more medial part of the ridge along the more central part of the axis
What are the 3 progressive kidney states as they develop from in weeks 4-10 from intermediate mesoderm?
- Pronephros (1st)
- Mesonephros (2nd)
- Metanephros (3rd)
What is the pronephros?
- non-functional kidney that quickly regresses
What is the mesonephros?
- 2nd kidney but 1st funcitonal kidney
- developes a mesonephric duct on the lateral side that drains into the cloaca of the hindgut
- has both filtration and collecting system
What aspect of mesonephros regression differs in males and females?
Males: mesonephric duct is retained and contributes to the formation of the male genital tract
Female: duct regresses completely after a short period
When does the metanephros become funcitonal?
around week 10
Note: this is the final kidney
What does the mesonephric duct (Wolffian) drain into?
Cloaca (future urinary bladder)
What are the functional kidney filtration system works in the up to week 8 or 9 and what does it consist of?
Mesonephros
- Bowman’s capsule
- glomerulus
- vascular loop
- mesonephric dutule that drains to the duct
When does the the development of the final kidney begin and what does it develop from?
- w4 -5 (not functional until week 10)
Develops from 2 distinct masses
- Ureteric Bud => MESONEPHRIC DUCT
- Metanephric blastema => INT. MESODERM
T or F: the Ureteric Bud of the mesonephric duct and metanephric blastema MUST be in good contact for a kidney to form
TRUE, this is the cause of the most common newborn kidney defect
What is the most common newborn kidney defect and what are its consequences?
- Renal Agenesis
- Asymptomatic because the other kidney compensates in size
What part of the kidney is the ureteric bud responsible for?
- The drainage system
1. Collecting Tubules
2. Minor Calyces
3. Major Clayces
4. Renal Pelvis
5. Ureter
What are the two most common abnormalities in ureteric developement?
- Double Ureter
2. Ectopic openings
What are the two different types of double ureter and their causes?
- Partial: typically results from a single ureter that tried to split
- Complete: simultaneous developement of two ureteric buds
**This is typically UNILATERAL and ASYMPTOMATIC
What is ectopic ureter and what is its manifestation in males and females?
- one ureter opens into bladder but the other open in some other location
Females: most commonly drains to vaginal canal, urethra, or vestibule
Males: most common sites are prostatic urethra, neck of bladder, or around trigone of the bladder
**CLINICALLY SIGNIFICANT because the person has URINARY INCONTINENCE
What forms the functional unit of the kidney?
- metanephric mass/blastema
- leads to formation of the cortex and medulla and nephron
What is unilateral renal agenesis?
- Causes?
- Frequency?
- Symptoms?
- Ureteric bud and metanephric blastema fail to develope or integrate properly –> results in the kidney never developing
- MOST COMMON of newborn renal defects
- Usually clinically Asymptomatic
- More common on LEFT SIDE, more common in MALES
What is unilateral hypoblastic kidney?
- Causes?
- Frequency?
- Symptoms?
- smaller than normal kidney that is properly formed the other kidney compensates
- SECOND most common
- Usually Asymptomatic
What is Supernumerary Kidney?
- Causes?
- Frequency?
- Symptoms?
- caused by splitting of the metanephric blastema
- Rare
- Asymptomatic
What is polycystic Kidney Disease?
- Causes?
- Symptoms?
- Collecting ducts dilate to form fluid-filled cysts (appearance manifested by end of trimester 3)
- Total Renal Failure after birth
What is bilateral renal agenesis and its consequences?
- symptoms?
- Kidneys don’t form
- ONLY cause of OLIGOHYDRAMNIOS (lack of enough amniotic fluid), because the fetus can swallow but not excrete fulid
- Usually accompanied by Potter Sequence and Hypoplastic lung
- Usually stillborn
What is Potter Sequence and what causes it in Renal Bilateral agenesis?
- Pulmonary Hypoplasia
- Limb Defects
- Facial Deformities
This is secondary to oligohydramnios
What is the final position of the kidney in the adult and what causes its ascent?
- T12-L3
- diminution of the body curvature and differential growth of the body in the lumbar and sacral regions
What is pelvic (ecotopic) kidney?
- causes?
- Symptoms?
- kidney fails to ascend and remains in the pelvic cavity
- asymptomatic (unless the kidney undergoes rotation causing ureter knot)
What is horshoe kidney?
- causes?
- Symtoms?
- kidneys get to close while passing through the arterial fork and fuse
- Get stuck on IMA
- Asymptomatic
What divides the hindgut and what spaces are created as a result of this division?
- Urorectal septum (mesoderm)
Cloaca is divided into:
- Anorectal Canal
- Urogenital sinus