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Published byAvice Ford Modified over 9 years ago
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WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ON CARDIAC EMBRYOLOGY Peer SupportJS View as a slideshow
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Main things to know Heart tube Make sure you can draw both the primitive and adult heart diagrams (5 swellings) Atrial septation Know the order of septal formation (primum, secundum, ovale) Ventricular septation Know the different parts and where they arise. Truncus arteriosus defects Know the main ones and those that can present with cyanosis
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Heart tube The CVS develops from extra-embryonic mesoderm Angiogenic cell clusters around the neural plate develop into cords before canalising to form to endocardial tubes (heart tubes) Lateral folding fuses these tubes into one heart tube Longitudinal folding relocates the heart, mouth and brain into their adult position.
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Heart Tube Swellings
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Atrial Septation A: Septum primum grows from the roof of the common atrium towards the endocardial cushion, leaving an ostium primum (primary foramen) B: Before this closes, small holes appear in the septum. C: These holes merge to form ostium secundum (secondary foramen) to allow blood flow between the atria. D: A stiffer, muscular septum secundum forms immediately to the right, leaving a gap near the endocardial cushion, the foramen ovale Since its floppy, septum primum becomes the valve for foramen ovale, and while RAP is high, allows R- to-L shunting of blood in utero. After birth, the foramen ovale closes leaving a depression known as the fossa ovalis. PFO is the most common ASD
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Ventricular Septation Muscular component Grows from floor of ventricle Membranous component Grows down from bulbar ridges and endocardial cushion VSD are the most common heart congenital anomaly, usually arise in membranous part of ventricular septum Aorticopulmonary septum forms in the common ventricular outflow from bulbar and truncal ridges in a 180° spiral
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Truncus arteriosus defects Cyanotic Transposition of Great Arteries most common cyanotic heart defect Tetralogy of Fallot Pulmonary stenosis, RVH, Overriding aorta, VSD (PROV) Persistent truncus arteriosus Also just called truncus arteriosus Critical pulmonary stenosis Non-cyanotic ASD VSD PDA Failure of equal division i.e. AS, non-severe PS
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Questions Look into “Embryology” Illustrated Colour Text by Mitchell and Sharma Email me
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