Download Fetal development

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Quantium Medical Cardiac Output wikipedia , lookup

Lutembacher's syndrome wikipedia , lookup

Atrial septal defect wikipedia , lookup

Dextro-Transposition of the great arteries wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
RSPT 2353 – Neonatal/Pediatric Cardiopulmonary Care
Fetal Development & Monitoring
Lecture Notes
Reference & Reading: Czervinske Chapters 1, 2, & 3
I. The duration of human pregnancy can be described in several ways:
a. 10 lunar months (4 weeks each)
b. 9 calendar months (3 trimesters of 3 months each)
c. 40 weeks
d. Gestational age refers to time from conception.
II. Definition of patient following delivery
a. Neonate: delivery – 1st month of life
b. Infant: 1 month to 1 year
c. Child >1 year of age
III. Growth & development is divided into 3 stages:
a. Ovum:
 Development of organism
 From conception to completion of implantation. (12-14 days)
b. Embryo:
 Major organs develop
 Extremely vulnerable to effects of radiation, infections, drugs
 End of ovum stage to approximately 3 cm from head to rump
(54-56 days)
c. Fetus:
 End of embryonic period to end of pregnancy
 Major organs are mostly developed
IV. Development of the Pulmonary System – begins at conception and continues
into pediatric years. Occurs in 5 stages:
a. EMBRYONIC PERIOD: FIRST 2 MONTHS OF GESTATION; DAY 26 – DAY 52
 P harynx begins development; earliest development of lungs;
lung bud appear like a small pouch
 Day 26 – pouch has grown & branching into R & L lung buds
 Lobar bronchi forming;
 Mesoderm differentiates into muscle, tissue & vessels
 Diaphragm begins development and is complete by the end of 7
weeks.
b. PSEUDOGLANDULAR PERIOD – DAY 52 - 16 WEEKS
 Week 7 – epiglottis is present; arytenoids tissues begin
developing & become opening of airway; membrane that
separates nasal cavity from oropharynx disintegrates @ choana
 Week 10 – cilica appear; present in peripheral airways by 13
weeks
 Week 12 – palates are formed
 Week 13-14 – goblet cells appear
 Fetal lungs development show significant dichotomy beginning
with 4 generations and developing to 25 generations by week
16
c. CANALICULAR PERIOD – 17 – 28 weeks
 Terminal and respiratory bronchioles multiply
 Week 17-26 - Large amount of vascularization
 Formation of alveolar ducts
 Week 20 – 22 - Type I and II alveolar cells differentiate
1. Type I forms alveolar capillary membrane
2. Type II produce pulmonary surfactant
 Capillaries are present @ 20-21 weeks, doesn’t allow gasexchange until 24-25 weeks
d. SACCULAR – WEEK 29-36
 SACCULES - smooth walled & cylindrical
 Subdivide and become alveoli
 Alveoli detected at 32 weeks; present at 36 weeks
e. ALVEOLAR PERIODS – WEEK 36 - TERM
 Alveoli are formed & continues to form until approx. age 8
 Number varies from 20 to 150 million
 With increasing number of Type II alveolar cells, pulmonary
surfactant is produced
V. Surfactant
a. Type II pneumocyte responsible for surfactant production
b. Lower surface tension in the alveolar wall
c. Prevent alveoli fro collapsing
d. Composed of phospholipids, neutral lipids, & proteins
e. In early stage (immature surfactant) production can be easily affected
f. Mature surfactant present around week 35
VI. Fetal Lung fluid
a. Functions
 Maintain patency of developing airways
 Plays a role in formation, size and shape of potential air spaces
b. Fluid must be evacuated from lungs at birth
 1/3 is removed by “the squeeze”
 Remaining is absorbed by pulmonary lymphatic system shortly
before birth
VII. DEVELOPMENT OF CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM – the heart is the first major organ
to develop
a. Early embryologic development
 Formation begins around day 21 or 3rd gestational week
 End or 3rd week – two tubes are formed and form a single,
continuous chamber
 Week 5-6 – heart begins to beat
 Sinus venosus – horns that eventually become inferior and
superior vena cava, and part of R atrium
 Truncus arteriosus grows from primitive ventricle; develops into
pulmonary artery and aorta
b. Cardiac Chambers
 Next the heart forms into an “S” shape
 Divides into R & L ventricles
 Blood beings to flow through sinus venosus and out truncus
arteriosus
 R & L atrium are formed with the growth of tissue call the
septum primum
c. Major vessels & cardiac valves
 Pulmonary aretery & aorta are formed by the separation of the
truncus arteriosus
 Valves form during this time
 Heart is formed at the end of 2 months (early in week 8)
VIII. Fetal circulation – Because of the involvement of the placenta as well as a
series of different shunts and pressures found in the fetal circulatory
system, there is different way the blood circulates & pressures normally
found in the adult are reversed.
a. Why?
1. There is a high resistance from the pulmonary
vasculature
2. Presence of the placenta offers little resistance to blood
flow
b. Fetal Circulation (fig 2-5)
1. Fetal Blood receives O2 & nutrients from PLACENTA
2. Collects in progressively larger vessels until it is in
UMBILICAL VEIN
3. Umbilical vein carries blood to fetus through umbilical
cord
4. Blood flow returns to placenta via umbilical arteries
c. DUCTUS VENOSUS
 Continuation of the umbilical vein into the INFERIOR VENA CAVA
 Fist shunt encountered
 Blood mixes with venous blood and enters R ATRIUM
d. FORAMEN OVALE
 2nd shunt met
 Opening between R & L atrium
 Pressure in R ATRIUM is usually higher, shunts into L ATRIUM
 There is a flap that acts like a one-way valve on the L side of
foramen ovale
e. DUCTUS ARTERIOSUS
 3rd shunt met
 Located where pulmonary arteries branch & connect to aorta
 Because of high pressures in lungs blood in PULMONARY ARTERIES
is shunted to AORTA
 Leaves 10% of blood circulating through lungs, enough for
developing lungs
f. Blood flow after the heart
 After aorta blood travels to UPPER EXTREMITIES, KIDNEYS, GUT & ABD
ORGANS
 In upper pelvic region, aorta splits into iliac arteries and further
to internal & external iliac arteries
 Internal arteries is where the UMBILICAL ARTERIES branch returns
to PLACENTA
IX. Other important intrauterine structures
a. Placenta
 Vital connection between fetus & mother
 Exchange of blood occurs
b. Umbilical Cord
 Lifeline between mother & fetus
 3 vessels – 2 arteries, 1 vein
 Surrounded by Wharton’s jelly
c. Amnion
 Sac that surrounds fetus
 Enlarges as embryo grows