Lecture 17: Establishing the Body Cavities and Formation of the Diaphragm Flashcards
Intraembryonic Coelem
Formed at beginning of fourth week. Vesicles in the lateral mesoderm coalesce, forming a horse-shoe shaped cavity
Functions of Intraembryonic Coelem
Continuous with extra-embryonic coelem (the space external to the yolk-sac), gives space for organs to grow into
Cranial-Caudal folding
The brain and tail regions grow quicker than the rest of the body, causing the embryo to fold into itself around the yolk sac
Lateral folding
The lateral edges of the germ disk fold towards each other, ventrally, caused by rapid growth of amnion and somites. Fuse in the midline. The yolk sac (made of endoderm) pinches off and becomes narrow and more tubular.
Regions of yolk sac after lateral folding
Foregut, midgut, hindgut
Mesoderm lining periteneal cavity
splanchnic mesoderm layer
Periteneal Cavity
What embryonic coelem is called after lateral folding is complete
Mesoderm lining the anterior body wall
somatic mesoderm layer
Dorsal Mesenteries
Suspends the gut tube (former yolk sac) within the periteneal cavity from dorsal side in caudal, foregut, midgut, hindgut
Ventral mesenteries
Suspends the gut tube from ventral side, only present in proximal foregut (stomach and doedunum)
Mesentery
A double layer of periteneum that connects organs to the body wall. Vessels and nerves travel through the mesentery, especially those supplying the gut
parts of embryonic body cavity
Pericardial cavity, peritoneal cavity, connected by 2 pericardial-peritoneal canals
Arterial supply to fore-gut
celiac artery
arterial supply to midgut
Superior mesenteric artery
Arterial supply to hindgut
Inferior mesenteric artery