Abstract
The cardiac cycle-related deformations of tubular embryonic hearts were traditionally described as concentric
narrowing and widening of a tube of circular cross section. Using optical coherence tomography
(OCT), we have recently shown that, during the cardiac cycle, only the myocardial tube undergoes concentric
narrowing and widening while the endocardial tube undergoes eccentric narrowing and widening,
having an elliptic cross-section at end-diastole and a slit-shaped cross-section at end-systole. Due to
technical limitations, these analyses were confined to early stages of ventricular development (chick
embryos, stages 10–13). Using a modified OCT-system, we now document, for the first time, the cyclic
changes in cross-sectional shape of beating embryonic ventricles at stages 14 to 17. We show that during
these stages (1) a large area of diminished cardiac jelly appears at the outer curvature of the ventricular
region associated with formation of endocardial pouches; (2) the ventricular endocardial lumen acquires
a bell-shaped cross-section at end-diastole and becomes compressed like a fireplace bellows during systole;
(3) the contracting portions of the embryonic ventricles display stretching along its baso-apical axis
at end-systole. The functional significance of our data is discussed with respect to early cardiac pumping
function.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Journal | Developmental Dynamics |
| Volume | 238 |
| Issue number | 12 |
| Pages (from-to) | 3273-3284 |
| ISSN | 1058-8388 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 2009 |
Keywords
- cardiac contraction
- optical coherence tomography
- heart development
- in vivo imaging
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