High Yield Embryology
High Yield Embryology
High Yield Embryology
General Embryology
Hydatidiform mole
Complete: no embryo, only trophoblast; abnormally high hCG; diploid,
only paternal chromosomes
Incomplete: partial embryo; high hCG; triploid with two sets of paternal
chromosomes
Choriocarcinoma: malignancy arising from invasive hydatidiform mole
Sacrococcygeal teratoma: most common tumor in newborns; arises from
persistent primitive streak and contains tissues from all three germ layers
Hemolytic Disease of the Newborn (HDN) or Erythroblastosis fetalis: mother
is Rh- and fetus is Rh+; mother produces antibody that results in hemolysis of
fetal red cells. Giving mother Rh immunoglobulin prevents HDN.
Head and Neck
Branchial apparatus
Branchial clefts (grooves): four pairs; ectoderm that forms only epithelium
1st:
external acoustic meatus
2nd - 4th:
usually regress but may unite to form cervical sinus that may
form a branchial fistula
Branchial pouches: four pairs; endoderm that forms only epithelium
1st:
auditory tube, mastoid antrum and tympanic cavity
2nd:
palatine tonsil
rd
3 :
thymus and inferior parathyroid
4th:
superior parathyroid and C cells of thyroid
Branchial arches: five pairs; mesoderm that forms only skeletal muscle; neural
crest grows into each arch to give rise to all connective tissue elements
(cartilage, bone and blood vessels)
ARCH
NERVE
First
CN V3
Second
CN VII
Third
Fourth
CN IX
CN X: pharyngeal branch
superior laryngeal nerve
CN X: recurrent laryngeal
nerve
Sixth
MUSCLES
Muscles of mastication, anterior belly of digastric,
mylohyoid, tensor tympani, tensor veli palatini
Muscles of facial expression, stapedius, posterior
belly of digastric, stylohyoid
Stylopharyngeus
Muscles of palate except tensor veli palatini,
pharyngeal muscles, cricothyroid
Muscles of larynx except cricothyroid, inferior
pharyngeal constrictor, cricopharyngeus, superior
portion of esophagus
Nervous system
Early development: notochord induces formation of neural plate that gives rise to
neural tube and neural crest
Notochord persists as nucleus pulposus of intervertebral disc
Neural crest gives rise to all ganglia (sensory, sympathetic, parasympathetic),
Schwann cells, arachnoid and pia, pigment cells (melanocytes), and cartilages,
bones and blood vessels of the head
Spina bifida: improper closure of neural tube (caudal neuropore); all forms of
spina bifida have high levels of alpha-fetoprotein in amniotic fluid; most benign
form is spina bifida cystica. Spina bifida with a meningocele has sac with dura,
arachnoid and CSF; spina bifida with a meningomyelocele also contains nerve
rootlets
Arnold-Chiari malformation: cerebellum herniates through foramen magnum;
seen with spina bifida cystica accompanied by hydrocephalus
Hydrocephalus: often due to congenital aqueductal stenosis that results from a
fetal viral infection (Toxoplasma gondii or cytomegalovirus)
Mental retardation: maternal alcohol abuse is the most common cause of
mental retardation
Urogenital: Derivatives of Wolffian and Mullerian ducts
Male embryo: high level of testosterone (further stimulates Wolffian duct) and
Mullerian inhibiting factor (prevents further development of Mullerian duct).
Female embryo: low level of testosterone (no further stimulation of Wolffian
duct) and no Mullerian inhibiting factor (allows Mullerian duct to develop)
Mesonephric (Wolffian) duct in both sexes gives rise to collecting tubules and
ducts, major and minor calices and ureter
Males:
Females:
Horseshoe kidney: inferior poles of both contact each other and fuse; ascent is
checked by inferior mesenteric artery