Circulation, Vol 70, 935-941, Copyright © 1984 by American Heart Association
MG St. John Sutton, JS Raichlen, N Reichek and DS Huff
We quantitated the growth patterns of the normal fetal heart and the right
and left ventricles from postmortem hearts obtained from 55 spontaneously
aborted human fetuses from the completion of cardiogenesis to term. Fetal
gestational age was assessed by menstrual history of the mother, crown-rump
length, head circumference, and body weight and ranged from 8 to 40 weeks.
Each heart was perfused and fixed at constant pressure and dissected to
obtain right and left ventricular free wall, left ventricular, and total
heart weights. Right and left ventricular free wall thicknesses were
measured and the respective surface areas were calculated. The changes in
each of these parameters with gestational age were examined by regression
analysis. Total heart and right and left ventricular wall weights increased
linearly with body weight, but exponentially with head circumference,
crown-rump length, and menstrual history. Right and left ventricular free
wall weights were similar throughout gestation and the percent that each
contributed to total heart weight were constant at 29 +/- 2% and 30 +/- 2%,
respectively. Right and left ventricular wall thicknesses did not differ
significantly, increasing linearly with menstrual age, crown- rump length,
head circumference, and body weight from 8 to 40 weeks. The surface areas
of the right and left ventricular free walls that we used as an index of
changing ventricular architecture were indistinguishable throughout the
period of gestation studied.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
ARTICLES
Quantitative assessment of right and left ventricular growth in the human fetal heart: a pathoanatomic study
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