Publication | Open Access
Developmental hemodynamic changes in the chick embryo from stage 18 to 27.
102
Citations
11
References
1982
Year
HypertensionDevelopmental Hemodynamic ChangesOrgan DevelopmentReproductive BiologyCardiovascular FunctionEmbryologyBlood FlowReproductive PhysiologyBlood Flow IncreasesEmbryo StagePublic HealthCardiologyBlood Flow MeasurementCardiac MechanicAnimal PhysiologyStage 18MorphogenesisVascular BiologyEmbryonic DevelopmentBiologyDevelopmental BiologyPhysiologyCardiovascular PhysiologyMedicineChick Embryo
We report the hemodynamic parameters of stage 18, 21, 24, and 27 chick embryos (from 3 to 5 days of incubation). Dorsal aortic blood velocity and mean vitelline artery blood pressure are measured with a 20 MHz pulsed-Doppler meter and servo-null pressure system respectively. We also measure heart rate, dorsal aortic diameter and embryo weight of each developmental stage. From these data, we calculate mean dorsal aortic blood flow, mean dorsal aortic blood flow per cardiac cycle, mean dorsal aortic blood flow per milligram embryo weight, vascular resistance and cardiac work. Blood flow increases geometrically with each embryo stage but remains constant when normalized for embryo weight. Mean arterial pressure increases linearly and vascular resistance decreases geometrically. Cardiac work increases in proportion to embryo weight. These results define the parameters of normal hemodynamic function during early embryonic development.
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