Peritoneal and GI development Flashcards
Are the events which will be described below sequential, or concurrent ?
Almost concurrent.
Identify the main steps in GI development.
Folding of the embryo Development of the foregut Development of the stomach Development of the duodenum Development of the liver Development of the gallbladder Development of the pancreas Development of the pancreatic ducts Development of the spleen Development of the midgut Development of the hindgut Development of mesentery derivatives
These are all more or less concurrent
Describe the main steps in the folding of the embryo.
FOLDING OF EMBRYO
The primitive yolk sac develops into the endodermal digestive tract or the gut tube in week 4
The connection between the gut tube and the secondary yolk sac will become the yolk stalk and then the Vitelline duct
Intraembryonic cavity (coelom) develops into the abdominopelvic cavity
The gut tube is suspended by dorsal mesentery
Visceral layer of lateral plate mesoderm will develop into visceral peritoneum
Describe the main steps in the development of the foregut.
FOREGUT
- The gut tube consists of a blind-ended cranial foregut (defined as part of gut tube extending from the mouth to just distal of the developing liver, terminating at the oropharyngeal/ buccopharyngeal membrane), a blind- ended caudal hindgut (terminating at the cloacal membrane), and a midgut that opens to the yolk sac through the vitelline duct
- Foregut gives rise to the Oesophagus (which, in turn gives rise to Tracheo-bronchial tree), Stomach, Proximal duodenum, Liver and gall bladder, Pancreas and spleen
- By week 5, the thoracic and abdominal portion of the foregut is visibly divided into the pharynx, oesophagus, stomach, and proximal duodenum
What is the innervation of the abdominal foregut ? As a result, where is pain from here referred ?
Coeliac trunk (T7 to T9, so pain referred to epigastrium)
Describe the main steps in the development of the stomach.
STOMACH
- By Week 4, part of the foregut which will become the stomach starts to dilate and become fusiform
- Differential growth of the stomach walls (the dorsal wall of the stomach growing faster than the ventral wall) results in formation of the greater curvature, fundus and cardiac notch
- Deformation of the ventral stomach wall forms the lesser curvature
- During weeks 6-7, Stomach rotates 90° around its longitudinal axis
(while also rotating around its sagittal axis). As a result of rotation around the longitudinal axis, left side faces anteriorly, the lesser curvature faces to the right and the greater curvature faces to the left. As a result of slight rotation around the sagittal axis, lesser curvature faces slightly upwards
Describe the main steps in the development of the duodenum.
DUODENUM
♦ The duodenum forms from the foregut and beginning of midgut
♦ Initially it is found in the midline but the rotations of the stomach also:
- rotate the duodenum
- cause the duodenum get into C shape
- displace the duodenum to the right until it lies against the dorsal body wall and becomes partially retroperitoneal
Describe the main steps in the development of the liver.
LIVER
• On about day 22, a small endodermal thickening, the hepatic plate, forms on the ventral side of the duodenum (hence in the ventral mesentery)
• Hepatic plate develops into the hepatic diverticulum (liver bud)
• Hepatic diverticulum gives rise to
- the inferior region of the septum transversum (which will become the diaphragm)
- hepatoblasts
1) Hepatoblasts become hepatocytes (parenchyma), bile canaliculi of the liver
(hepatic ducts)
2) Liver sinusoids (stroma) develop from septum transversum
3) The ventral mesentery around the liver becomes its visceral peritoneum. Ventral mesentery also reflects onto the diaphragm and the area between these reflections is the bare area of the liver is where it contacts the diaphragm.
Describe the main steps in the development of the gallbladder.
GALLBLADDER
♣ By day twenty-six, an endodermal thickening forms on the ventral side of the duodenum just caudal to the hepatic diverticulum and grows into the ventral mesentery
♣ This cystic diverticulum will form the gallbladder and cystic duct
Describe the main steps in the development of the pancreas.
PANCREAS
♠ On day 26 dorsal pancreatic bud begins to grow into the dorsal mesentery just opposite the hepatic diverticulum
♠ Another endodermal diverticulum, the ventral pancreatic bud, develops and grows into the ventral mesentery just caudal to the developing gallbladder
♠ This ventral pancreatic bud will give rise to:
- the ventral pancreas → the uncinate process
- the common bile duct
♠ The rotation of the duodenum causes the ventral bud to migrate around to lie behind and fuse with the dorsal bud so that the adult pancreas lies in the curve of the duodenum
Describe the mains steps in the development of the pancreatic ducts.
PANCREATIC DUCTS
♦ When the ventral and dorsal pancreatic buds fuse, their ductal systems also become interconnected.
♦ The proximal portion of the duct of dorsal pancreas degenerates. The accessory duct is the remnant of the duct of the dorsal bud
♦ The ducts of the dorsal and ventral buds unite to form the main pancreatic duct
♦ The main pancreatic duct and the common bile duct meet and drain into the 2nd part of duodenum at the major duodenal papilla or ampulla of Vater.
NB: SOMETIMES the proximal dorsal pancreatic duct persists as an accessory pancreatic duct that empties into the duodenum at a minor duodenal papilla
Describe the main steps in the development of the spleen.
SPLEEN
♦ a mesenchymal condensation develops within it near the body wall.
♦ This condensation differentiates during the fifth week to form the spleen
♦ This is a mesodermal derivative, not a product of the gut tube endoderm
♦ However, rotation of the stomach and growth of the dorsal mesogastrium translocate the spleen to the left side of the abdominal cavity
♦ The portion of the dorsal mesentery between the spleen and the stomach is called the gastrosplenic ligament.
Describe the main steps in the development of the midgut.
MIDGUT
• The future ileum elongates more rapidly and by the fifth week the midgut makes the primary intestinal loop
- Pressure of growing abdominal organs (especially the liver) forces the primary intestinal loop to herniate into the umbilicus during the sixth week
- As the primary intestinal loop herniates, it rotates around the axis of the superior mesenteric artery by 90 degrees counterclockwise (as viewed from the ventral side) so that the future ileum lies in the right abdomen and the future large intestine lies in the left abdomen
- The small intestine keeps on elongating to form jejunal-ileal loops
- The caecum expands and vermiform appendix is also formed
• During the tenth week, the midgut retracts into the abdomen
• During the eleventh week, the retracting midgut does another 180° of rotation (a total of 270° rotation)
- the caecum is positioned just inferior to the liver.
- The caecum is then displaced inferiorly, pulling down the proximal hindgut to form the ascending colon.
- The descending colon is simultaneously fixed on the left side of the posterior abdominal wall. The jejunum, ileum, transverse colon, and sigmoid colon remain suspended by mesentery.
Describe the main steps in the development of the hindgut.
HINDGUT
♦ Just superior to the cloacal membrane, the primitive gut tube forms an expansion called the cloaca.
♦ A slim diverticulum of the cloaca called the allantois extends into the yolk stalk
♦ During the fourth to sixth weeks, a coronal urorectal septum divides the cloaca
− Anteriorly the cloaca develops into the urogenital sinus → urogenital structures
− Posteriorly the cloaca develops into the anorectal canal (proximal 2/3 anal canal)
♦ As the tip of the urorectal septum approaches the cloacal membrane, the anal part of the membrane sinks into the anal pit and the cloacal membrane ruptures
− As a result the urogenital sinus and dorsal anorectal canal open to the exterior.
What structures does the midgut form ?
The mid gut forms the distal duodenum, jejunum, ileum, caecum, ascending colon, and proximal two thirds of the transverse colon