Respiratory Embryology Flashcards

1
Q

What does the laryngotracheal groove become?

When does it develop?

A

pulmonary epithelium
glands of larynx, trachea & bronchi

week 4

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2
Q

What does the splanchnic mesoderm (from lat plate) of laryngotracheal groove become?

A

CT, cartilage & smooth muscle of respiratory system (surrounds the foregut)

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3
Q

Where does the lung bud come from?

A

laryngotracheal diverticulum (evagination of laryngotracheal groove)

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4
Q

Why are the tracheoesophageal folds important? When do they fuse?

A

endodermal ingrowth of laryngotracheal tube that fuses to form tracheoesophageal septum (by end of week 5)

divides cranial portion of foregut & separates respiratory system from digestive system

fuse during week 5

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5
Q

Where is the laryngotracheal tube located by end of week 5?

A

ventral part of foregut

primordium larynx, trachea, bronchi & lungs

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6
Q

What does the dorsal part of the tracheoesophageal septum become?

A

primordium oropharynx & esophagus

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7
Q

Where does the epithelial lining of the larynx come from?

A

endoderm of laryngotracheal tube

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8
Q

Where do the cartilages & CT of larynx come from?

A

mesenchyme of PA 4 & 6

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9
Q

What is the result of the proliferation of the laryngotracheal tube endoderm?

A

occlusion of the lumen of the tube

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10
Q

When does recanalization occur and what is the result?

A

during week 10

true vocal folds & vestibular folds in the larynx

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11
Q

Where does the epiglottis come from?

A

hypopharyngeal eminence (mesenchme of PA 3 & 4)

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12
Q

Where do the laryngeal muscles come from?

A

myoblasts of PA 4 & 6

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13
Q

What does the division of the laryngotracheal diverticulum produce?

A

trachea (late week 4/early week 5)

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14
Q

Endoderm derivatives of trachea

A

tracheal epithelium
tracheal glands
pulmonary epithelium (lining of lungs)

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15
Q

Splanchnic mesenchyme derivatives of trachea

A

tracheal cart (hyaline cart)
tracheal CT
tracheal smooth m

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16
Q

Why is splanchnic mesenchyme important in respiratory development?

A

lung development requires SM to signal for bronchial bud branching in week 5

17
Q

Visceral pleura

A

splanchnic mesoderm of lateral plate

18
Q

Parietal pleura

A

somatic mesoderm of lateral plate

19
Q

4 stages of prenatal lung development

A

Pseudoglandular (weeks 5-17)
Canalicular (weeks 16-25)
Terminal sac (week 24-birth)
Alveolar (week 32-8yo)

20
Q

Pseudoglandular stage

A

weeks 5-17
all major elements of lung formed
no alevoli for gas exchange

fetus is NOT survivable

21
Q

Canalicular stage

A

weeks 16-25

vascularization
resp bronchioles + primordial alevolar & sacs

fetus is +/- survivable

22
Q

Terminal sac stage

A

week 24-birth

increase # of alveoli
vascularization of thin epithelium
Type 1 & Type 2 pneumocytes
lymph capillaries

survivable b/c gas xchange can occur!

23
Q

Alveolar stage

A

week 32-8yo

alveolocapillary membrane
primitive & mature alveoli (95% of alveoli mature post-natally)

24
Q

What stage of lung development is the fetus definitely survivable?

A

terminal sac stage (week 24-birth) b/c has necessary components for proper gas exchange

25
Q

How is splanchnic mesoderm critical for bronchi development?

A

as alveoli are added, need to keep developing other supporting tissue & needed for:

bronchial cartilage plates
bronchial smooth m & CT
pulmonary CT & capillaries

26
Q

Largyngeal atresia

A

failure of laryngeal recanalization in week 10

obstructed upper fetal airway

airways dilated, lungs large & filled w/ fluid, diaphragm may be flat or inverted

27
Q

Tracheoesophageal atresia

A

abnormal connection btwn trachea & esophagus due to failure of foregut endoderm to proliferate in relation to whole embryo

can’t swallow, drool, regurgitate food (GI contents can reflux thru fistula into trachea & lungs)

lung development can be impaired

28
Q

Pulmonary agensis

A

failure of splitting of R & L bronchial buds from respiratory bud

complete absence of lung or lobe & its accompanying bronchi

29
Q

Oligohydramnios

A

pulmonary hypoplasia due to insufficient amniotic fluid production (renal issue)

restricted fetal thorax from uterine pressure

clubbed feet, compressed face, issues w/ hand placement & breech position

30
Q

Respiratory Distress Syndrome

A

due to surfactant deficiency (type 2 pneumocytes can’t produce surfactant)

lungs are underinflated & alveoli appear glassy

grunting, cyanosis

31
Q

Role of surfactant

A

produced by type 2 pneumocytes

keeps surface tension @ min (btwn air/liquid interface) w/ in alveoli of lungs & prevents lung collapse during expiration

32
Q

Congenital lung cysts

A

issue w/ bronchial development due to abnormal dilation of terminal bronchi in late fetus

cysts are filled w/ fluid or air

wheezing, cyanosis, issues breathing

33
Q

Fetal Breathing Movements

A

critical for proper lung develop (conditioning of respiratory muscles)

forceful aspiration of amniotic fluid stimulates lung development

amniotic fluid is replaced by air in alveoli @ birth

34
Q

How is amniotic fluid in lungs cleared?

A

released from mouth/nose via pressure on fetal thorax during vaginal delivery

absorbed by pulmonary capillaries, arteries & veins

absorbed by lymphatics