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Circulation, Vol 84, 2028-2033, Copyright © 1991 by American Heart Association
PC Ursell, JM Byrne, TR Fears, BA Strobino and WM Gersony
BACKGROUND. There is a paucity of quantitative anatomic data regarding
human great vessel development that could be useful as a reference for
fetal echocardiographers who must distinguish abnormal from normal cardiac
development at early stages. METHODS AND RESULTS. To determine normal
growth patterns, we plotted the diameters of the aortic and pulmonary
valves, ductus arteriosus, aortic isthmus, and descending aorta in 274
autopsy specimens from nonselected spontaneous abortuses of normal
karyotype. There was a linear increase in the diameters of these structures
within the developmental period studied (10-26 weeks). A relative narrowing
of the aorta at the isthmus compared with the aortic valve and descending
aorta probably indicates that the majority of fetal left heart output goes
to the developing heart and brain. In contrast to previous studies of late
gestation and neonatal animals, however, we found that the diameter of the
aortic isthmus was larger than that of the ductus arteriosus, suggesting
substantial isthmic blood flow in these midtrimester fetuses. Among
nineteen other hearts with diverse defects, both of two hearts with a
narrow isthmus had an enlarged ductus arteriosus and one heart with
pulmonary atresia/intact septum had a narrow ductus and increased aortic
valve diameter. CONCLUSIONS. During midgestation, the normal heart may have
substantial aortic isthmic blood flow that diminishes due to rerouting in
late gestation when increased requirements of the fetal brain and other
organs prevail. Although fetal shunts may explain some vessel
abnormalities, the majority of cardiac defects in this study were not
associated with abnormal growth of the great vessels within this
developmental age range.
ARTICLES
Growth of the great vessels in the normal human fetus and in the fetus with cardiac defects
Department of Pathology, Gertrude H. Sergievsky Center, Columbia University, New York.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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P. Udomwan, S. Luewan, and T. Tongsong Fetal Aortic Arch Measurements at 14 to 40 Weeks' Gestation Derived by Spatiotemporal Image Correlation Volume Data Sets J. Ultrasound Med., December 1, 2009; 28(12): 1651 - 1656. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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