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Embryological Development of Thoracic Structures

Embryological Development of Thoracic Structures

Embryological Development of Thoracic Structures

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Diaphragm Formation - Midriff Marvels

  • Develops mainly between 4th-7th weeks.
  • Key contributing structures:
    • Septum transversum → Central tendon
    • Pleuroperitoneal membranes → Peripheral diaphragm
    • Dorsal mesentery of esophagus → Crura
    • Muscular ingrowth from lateral body walls → Outermost periphery
  • 📌 Mnemonic for components: "Some People Don't Mind"
    • S: Septum transversum
    • P: Pleuroperitoneal membranes
    • D: Dorsal mesentery of esophagus
    • M: Muscular ingrowth from body walls
  • Innervation: Phrenic nerve (C3, C4, C5). 📌 "C3, 4, 5 keeps the diaphragm alive."

⭐ Most common congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is Bochdalek hernia (posterolateral, usually left-sided), due to defective closure of the pleuroperitoneal canal. Diaphragm embryological components

Lung Development - Airways Arise

  • Origin: Respiratory diverticulum (lung bud) from ventral foregut (endoderm), 4th week.
  • Components:
    • Endoderm: Epithelial lining (larynx, trachea, bronchi, alveoli).
    • Splanchnic Mesoderm: Cartilage, muscle, CT, visceral pleura.
  • Tracheoesophageal Septum: Divides foregut. Defects → Tracheoesophageal Fistula (TEF).

    ⭐ Tracheoesophageal fistula (TEF) is often associated with polyhydramnios due to impaired fetal swallowing of amniotic fluid.

  • Branching: Lung bud → bronchial buds → lobar → segmental → terminal bronchioles (by ~16 wks).

Stages of Lung Maturation (📌 Every Pulmonologist Can See Alveoli)

Lung Development Stages and Bronchial Tree Branching

Cardiac & Vascular Thorax - Pump Priming

  • Heart Tube Formation (Wk 3-4): Endocardial tubes (splanchnic mesoderm) fuse → primitive heart tube. Segments (caudal-cranial): Sinus Venosus (SV), Primitive Atrium (PA), Primitive Ventricle (PV), Bulbus Cordis (BC), Truncus Arteriosus (TA). Dextral looping (D-loop) positions chambers.
  • Septation (Wk 4-8): Atrial: Septum primum & secundum → foramen ovale. Ventricular: Muscular & membranous (neural crest). Aorticopulmonary (neural crest): TA → aorta & pulmonary trunk.
  • Aortic Arch Derivatives:
    • 3rd: Common/internal carotids.
    • 4th: L-Aortic arch; R-Prox. R. subclavian a.
    • 6th: Prox-Pulmonary a.; L.distal-Ductus arteriosus. Aortic Arch Derivatives
  • Fetal Shunts: Ductus venosus, foramen ovale, ductus arteriosus bypass fetal lungs/liver.

⭐ Coarctation of the aorta is a common congenital anomaly, often associated with Turner syndrome and bicuspid aortic valve.

Thoracic Cage Embryology - Bony Box Build

  • Ribs:
    • Develop from sclerotome portion of paraxial mesoderm.
    • From mesenchymal costal processes of thoracic vertebrae.
    • Chondrify (cartilage model), then ossify via endochondral ossification.
    • Types: True ribs (1-7), false ribs (8-10), floating ribs (11-12).
  • Sternum:
    • Develops from two sternal bars (mesenchymal condensations) from somatic layer of lateral plate mesoderm.
    • Bars fuse craniocaudally in the midline (wk 6-10).
    • Ossification centers (sternebrae) appear craniocaudally; xiphoid process ossifies last (childhood/adulthood).
    • Clinical: Failure of fusion leads to sternal clefts/foramina.

⭐ Pectus excavatum, the most common congenital chest wall deformity, involves posterior displacement of the sternum and costal cartilages.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Lung bud (respiratory diverticulum) from ventral foregut (week 4); tracheoesophageal septum defects cause TEF.
  • Diaphragm forms from: septum transversum, pleuroperitoneal membranes, dorsal mesentery of esophagus, body wall mesoderm.
  • CDH (often Bochdalek, posterolateral) from failed pleuroperitoneal membrane fusion.
  • Lung maturation stages: Embryonic, Pseudoglandular, Canalicular (viability), Saccular, Alveolar. Surfactant by Type II pneumocytes.
  • Aortic arches: 4th left forms aortic arch; 6th forms pulmonary arteries & ductus arteriosus.

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