00:00:00
so we're going to be talking about the
00:00:02
embryology of the heart and we're going
00:00:03
to break it down very simply so that you
00:00:06
understand everything that's going on
00:00:08
I've drawn a lot of crap up here uh
00:00:10
don't let it confuse you don't even look
00:00:11
at it yet we'll go through it step by
00:00:14
step and you should be by the end of it
00:00:17
understand what's going on okay so let's
00:00:19
just begin at the beginning the first
00:00:21
thing that happens is the egg is
00:00:24
fertilized it moves down the uterine
00:00:27
tubes and you'll get something looking
00:00:29
like this that's called the blastula
00:00:31
that's what you were before you were
00:00:33
born before anything of anything
00:00:36
happened so as the blastula migrates
00:00:38
down into the uterus it implants into
00:00:40
the uterine wall and a process of
00:00:43
gastrulation will form the three germ
00:00:45
layers and I'm sure that you've seen
00:00:47
this everywhere it's a simplification of
00:00:50
what we see here so we have that there
00:00:53
the top layer in blue that's the
00:00:57
ectoderm the ectoderm gives to the
00:01:00
epidermis and the central nervous system
00:01:02
in the middle we have the intermediate
00:01:04
mesoderm and at the bottom in green we
00:01:06
have the
00:01:11
endoderm so the intermediate mesoderm
00:01:13
has three main components to it first it
00:01:16
has the paraxial
00:01:19
mesoderm the paraxial mesoderm gives
00:01:22
rise to the somites so you'll have your
00:01:24
muscles coming developing from the
00:01:26
paraxial mesoderm you'll have the
00:01:28
intermediate mesoderm
00:01:33
and the intermediate mesoderm gives rise
00:01:35
to the gonads and the kidneys and
00:01:38
finally we have the lateral plates at
00:01:39
the end so the lateral plates are made
00:01:42
up of two uh different plates we have
00:01:46
the
00:01:48
sematic and we have the
00:01:52
slanking now the heart is derived from
00:01:55
the splank niic lateral plat so the
00:01:57
splank niic mesoderm so
00:02:00
the main thing the first thing that you
00:02:02
should know is that the heart where is
00:02:04
it derived from from the mesoderm from
00:02:06
the lateral plates from the spanic
00:02:08
mesoderm so the progenitor heart cells
00:02:13
they actually migrate from the
00:02:16
epiderm I mean oh sorry for the from the
00:02:19
from the ectoderm cells from the
00:02:20
ectoderm and they migrate down the
00:02:22
Primitive
00:02:23
streak into the spanic mesor so as they
00:02:28
are migrating they'll live and where the
00:02:32
spanic mesoderm
00:02:34
is and this section now will be called
00:02:37
the primary heart field now the primary
00:02:39
heart field gives rise to the uh left
00:02:42
ventricle the Atria and part of the
00:02:45
right
00:02:47
ventricle so um where does the rest of
00:02:50
the right ventricle come from it comes
00:02:52
from a section called the secondary
00:02:54
heart field now if we have a just give
00:02:57
give me your attention just to this over
00:02:59
here don't don't look at anything else
00:03:01
just look at he and it might be a bit
00:03:04
difficult to understand but we'll get go
00:03:05
through it so what happens is the rest
00:03:08
of the right ventricle comes from here
00:03:11
so you have this section here where the
00:03:13
secondary heart field is and in red here
00:03:16
we have the the heart so we have the
00:03:19
primary heart field made from the
00:03:23
cardiac myoblast and the blood Islands
00:03:26
from that were from the spanic mesoderm
00:03:30
making up the heart over here which
00:03:32
we'll go through in a second and the
00:03:34
rest of the heart is derived from the
00:03:37
secondary heart field over here which is
00:03:39
still from the spanic mesome so this
00:03:41
here is still from this section over
00:03:44
here okay so what happens is it sends
00:03:48
cells down and it builds and elongates
00:03:52
the
00:03:54
U the the heart and it is responsible
00:03:57
for building up the truncus AR
00:04:00
arteriosis and the conus Cordis so
00:04:03
that's just and and it's important to
00:04:05
know this because any shortages any
00:04:09
defects in the secondary heart field
00:04:12
would lead to defects in child birth so
00:04:15
um with that being said let's move on to
00:04:18
how the heart is actually developed
00:04:21
so this Pokemon looking uh creature over
00:04:25
here is a uh day 18 cross-section of of
00:04:29
the embryo so it's got this big green
00:04:33
tongue that's still the
00:04:35
endo and and as it folds if just just
00:04:38
pay attention to the green the Green's
00:04:40
the Endo has nothing to do with the
00:04:42
heart but just to get an idea of what's
00:04:44
going on it'll form the Primitive tube
00:04:47
over here primitive gut tube so this
00:04:50
green endoderm Pokemon tongue becomes
00:04:52
Pokemon mouth into the Primitive uh gut
00:04:57
tube right over here so
00:05:00
let's pay attention to the Pokémon's
00:05:02
face now so its cheeks and its eyes the
00:05:05
whole Pokemon over here in red is still
00:05:08
the spannick mesoderm it's still this
00:05:11
bottom section of lateral plate so what
00:05:14
happens is as it folds the blood islands
00:05:17
and the cardiac myoblasts will form
00:05:20
these endothelial heart tubes
00:05:30
and this dorsal
00:05:39
aot and to get an idea on what that is
00:05:43
how that actually looks like because
00:05:44
this is probably still looks like a
00:05:45
Pokémon to you you don't know how the
00:05:48
heart is derived from that just let's
00:05:50
flip this like this just like and then
00:05:55
you'll have something like this over
00:05:56
here so you have your endo tubes here
00:06:01
and I'm sure you've been exposed to that
00:06:02
before you've seen what that is so you
00:06:04
have your venous blood coming in and
00:06:07
going up and what happens as it fall as
00:06:10
the embryo Falls both dorsally and
00:06:12
cranially it also falls laterally and
00:06:15
that will
00:06:17
cause the endothelial tubes to join so
00:06:22
these are the endothelial tubes this is
00:06:24
a a flipped up
00:06:27
version and so what happens is that
00:06:29
fuses into one over here on day
00:06:32
22 and likewise the dorsal aot they will
00:06:36
fuse and become the descending aorta so
00:06:40
the cheeks of the Pokemon they're the
00:06:42
endothelial tubes don't let it don't get
00:06:44
too confused about
00:06:45
it it's just this so this is this and
00:06:50
that is that so blood flow is coming up
00:06:54
and that would be eventually the
00:06:56
descending aort over here
00:07:00
so coming looking at this uh Pokémon
00:07:04
that has transformed into whatever it is
00:07:07
now with the mouth you have over here
00:07:11
the single cardiac tube the heart tube
00:07:15
which can be which is equivalent to this
00:07:18
or this so if we flip this up again
00:07:21
you'll see either this or this so um and
00:07:26
these obviously are the dorsal aor which
00:07:29
will eventually fuse together and these
00:07:32
are this is no longer an endothelial
00:07:35
tube you can say that it's the heart now
00:07:37
so the heart has begun
00:07:39
pumping and so on day 22 so we should
00:07:42
probably go through this each the the
00:07:45
anatomy of of each section so the bottom
00:07:47
over here we'll have the um we'll have
00:07:51
the
00:07:53
atrium and we will also um
00:07:59
the sinus
00:08:01
venosum so the sinus venosum gives rise
00:08:04
to the Smooth Wall layer of the atrium
00:08:07
The Atrium gives rise to the left and
00:08:09
right atrium and this B big bul section
00:08:13
that is The
00:08:17
ventricle and that gives rise to the
00:08:19
left ventricle and then we'll have
00:08:22
the bulus
00:08:25
cordus um
00:08:30
and also the truncus
00:08:36
arteriosis so if we have we still have
00:08:39
the atrium here maybe in this section
00:08:42
The ventricle here the Volus Cordis and
00:08:44
the truncus A arteriosis and essentially
00:08:48
how the heart folds is that the bous
00:08:50
Cordis and the truncus arteriosis they
00:08:53
fold ventrally and
00:08:54
dorsally and The ventricle Atrium and
00:08:57
the sinus venosum squished up behind it
00:09:00
so you'll have this if we look at it
00:09:02
from a little bit of a side view a
00:09:04
squishing up happening if I can explain
00:09:08
it in that simple way so the truncus
00:09:10
arteriosis and the bulbous Cordis move
00:09:14
uh fold ventrally and dorsally so
00:09:17
forward and down and squish up the rest
00:09:20
of them so and by day 24 we'll have the
00:09:23
heart looking like this and at day 28 if
00:09:26
we get the frontal section it'll look
00:09:29
like so you have blood flow leaving the
00:09:31
heart from here and receiving it from
00:09:33
the back so this over here is behind
00:09:36
this heart right now so on day 30 if we
00:09:40
just slice the heart like this on day 30
00:09:44
we'll have a heart looking like
00:09:45
something like this and I'm just going
00:09:47
to I'm not going to go into too much
00:09:49
detail I'm just going to discuss the
00:09:51
blood flow in it and essentially the
00:09:55
um how it develops so we'll have veinous
00:09:59
the blood FL coming
00:10:02
in like this so it comes in here from
00:10:05
the atrio ventricular section and flows
00:10:10
in from the to the
00:10:13
um uh out through the truncus arteriosis
00:10:17
here So eventually as the heart develops
00:10:21
the septum
00:10:22
will form and this uh will go into two
00:10:28
parts like this
00:10:31
okay that's out of
00:10:33
the we'll discuss that the development
00:10:36
of each septum in a different video but
00:10:38
essentially what happens is um right
00:10:43
before birth the heart will look like
00:10:45
this but not really I'm going to go
00:10:48
through the development of the foran oal
00:10:52
as
00:10:54
well to finish it off
00:10:56
so what happens is
00:11:01
we have a bud growing from the top of
00:11:03
the heart called the septum
00:11:08
primer and also from this endothelial
00:11:11
cushion we have a bud growing and
00:11:13
eventually they
00:11:14
grow in a way so that they meet each
00:11:17
other and form completely but before
00:11:20
they form completely cell death causes
00:11:23
the top part to uh open up like this
00:11:33
and at the same time we'll have a septum
00:11:38
second
00:11:40
growing from the top and from the
00:11:44
bottom so the Gap that the septum second
00:11:47
leaves so that's the septum
00:11:53
second and this is the septum Prim
00:12:00
so the Gap that the septum second septum
00:12:03
second leaves that's the that's the
00:12:06
foran foran oal so just here this
00:12:11
section is the foran oal and it's very
00:12:14
important to understand this because um
00:12:17
defects in this uh can contribute to uh
00:12:22
tetrology of the heart such as the Tet
00:12:25
tetrology
00:12:26
of for example that's the
00:12:29
uh disruption in the foral is one
00:12:31
component of that so what happens is
00:12:36
before birth the pressure in the right
00:12:39
atrium is much higher than the pressure
00:12:42
in the left atrium so what that causes
00:12:45
is blood flow to
00:12:48
to be pushed from
00:12:51
here into here so this septum primum can
00:12:56
act like a valve uh and the purpose of
00:12:59
that is to bypass the pulm
00:13:01
circulation so at at Birth however what
00:13:06
you'll have
00:13:08
is a pressure change where there's
00:13:11
increased pressure in the left atrium so
00:13:14
what that causes is the closure of this
00:13:17
valve and eventually in with uh
00:13:21
increasing pressure in here more than
00:13:24
more so than here the prim the septum
00:13:27
primum and the septum second will fused
00:13:30
and permanently shut so that's how the
00:13:33
foran oil is closed and that's a general
00:13:36
overview of how the heart is uh
00:13:39
developed if you have any questions
00:13:41
please leave a comment under the video
00:13:43
thanks