Dorsal aorta
This article is about the embryonic artery. For the artery in adult fish, see Aorta § In other animals.
Dorsal aortae | |
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Profile view of a human embryo estimated at twenty or twenty-one days old. (Dorsal aorta labeled at center left.) | |
Details | |
Carnegie stage | 9 |
Identifiers | |
Latin | aortae dorsales |
Code | TE E5.11.2.1.3.0.1 |
Each primitive aorta receives anteriorly a vein—the vitelline vein—from the yolk-sac, and is prolonged backward on the lateral aspect of the notochord under the name of the dorsal aorta. The paired dorsal aortae arise from aortic arches that in turn arise from the aortic sac.
The dorsal aortae give branches to the yolk-sac, and are continued backward through the body-stalk as the umbilical arteries to the villi of the chorion.
The two dorsal aortae combine to become the descending aorta in later development.
External links
- Embryology at Temple Heart98/heart97a/sld017
- Embryology at UNSW Notes/git
- cardev-009—Embryo Images at University of North Carolina
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