formation of the heart primordium
cardiac looping
•brings inflow tract cranially so that inflow and outflow are next to each other
ventricular inversion
situs inversus
•complete left looping can occur in combination with reversed looping of the gut to produce normal but reversed viscera, in which the heart (and gut) is a fully functional mirror image of normal
sinus venosus
•has 2 horns
•each horn receives blood from three sources
-umbilical vein (placenta)
-vitelline vein (gut tube —> portal vein)
-common cardinal vein form the anterior and posterior cardinal veins –> IVC)
•from right to left these inputs form the Superior Vena Cava, the smooth part of the right atrium between the IVC and SVC and the Coronary Sinus
•don’t worry about the formation of the IVC - too complicated
primitive atrium
atrioventricular canal
•the constriction between the primitive atrium and the ventricle is the site where the AV valves will form
primitive ventricle
outflow tract
•connects between the single ventricle and the aortic arch
•will divide into subregions
-bulbus cordis (smooth walled parts of the ventricles)
-truncus arteriosis (ascending aorta and pulmonary trunk)
arch vessels
pulmonary veins
•grow into left atrium from the pulmonary mesenchyme by de novo angiogenesis can can (rarely) attach inappropriately
septum intermedium
* fusion of cardiac cushions
septum primum
ostium secundum
septum secundum
fossa ovalis
interventricular septum
membranous septum
division of the outflow tract
ductus arteriosis
endocardium
myocardium
cardiac jelly
epicardium