The development of the early atrioventricular conduction system in the embryonic heart

Author:

Virágh Sz.,Challice C. E.

Abstract

Recent electrophysiological evidence indicates that periodic spontaneous depolarizations occur in the primordial heart of the bird (and presumably mammal) even before the myocardial cells can contract, and these are initiated in the primordial sinoatrial region. As contractions are generated, these then establish a peristaltic wave. From that time on, during ontogenesis, the contractile sequence follows a regular pattern of development. As chambers form they contract sequentially in the direction of blood flow, even though, in the twisted configuration, myocardial continuities suggest the possibility of short-circuiting the electrical conduction pathways from atrium to bulbus. This implies that, even at these early stages, the electrical properties of the myocardium are not isotropic, and that specialized conduction pathways must exist. To the present time, electrophysiological techniques have limited the direct evidence that can be obtained on these delicate electrically specialized pathways. However, microscopical techniques have permitted studies on the morphological development of the tissue and of the cells in the various regions of the myocardium. The present paper traces the development of cell morphology in these regions, including the development of structural nodes and proximal ventricular fibre pathways, and from these observations, the manner in which the electrical conduction pathways are believed to develop is suggested.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology

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