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  2. Fetal circulation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fetal_circulation

    It is the fetal heart and not the mother's heart that builds up the fetal blood pressure to drive its blood through the fetal circulation. Intracardiac pressure remains identical between the right and left ventricles of the human fetus. [15]

  3. Heart development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_development

    The heart is the first functional organ in vertebrate embryos. The tubular heart quickly differentiates into the truncus arteriosus, bulbus cordis, primitive ventricle, primitive atrium, and the sinus venosus. The truncus arteriosus splits into the ascending aorta and the pulmonary trunk. The bulbus cordis forms part of the ventricles.

  4. Human embryonic development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_embryonic_development

    Nine-week-old human embryo from an ectopic pregnancy. Organogenesis is the development of the organs that begins during the third to eighth week, and continues until birth. Sometimes full development, as in the lungs, continues after birth. Different organs take part in the development of the many organ systems of the body.

  5. Foramen ovale (heart) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foramen_ovale_(heart)

    A fetus receives oxygen not from its lungs, but from the mother's oxygen-rich blood via the placenta. Oxygenated blood from the placenta travels through the umbilical cord to the right atrium of the fetal heart. As the fetal lungs are non-functional at this time, the blood bypasses them through two cardiac shunts.

  6. Tubular heart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tubular_heart

    The tubular heart or primitive heart tube is the earliest stage of heart development. [1] The heart is the first organ to develop during human embryonic development. [2]From the inflow to the outflow, the tubular heart consists of sinus venosus, primitive atrium, the primitive ventricle, the bulbus cordis, and truncus arteriosus. [3]

  7. Embryo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embryo

    Neurulation forms the nervous system, and organogenesis is the development of all the various tissues and organs of the body. A newly developing human is typically referred to as an embryo until the ninth week after conception, when it is then referred to as a fetus.

  8. Could This Overlooked Organ Hold The Key To Living Longer?

    www.aol.com/could-overlooked-organ-hold-key...

    A female fetus (your mom, in this scenario) develops ovaries, with all the immature eggs she will ever have, by 20 weeks gestation. So, your X chromosome has likely existed for decades before you ...

  9. Umbilical artery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Umbilical_artery

    A portion remains open as a branch of the anterior division of the internal iliac artery. The umbilical artery is found in the pelvis, and gives rise to the superior vesical arteries, which in males usually supplies the artery to the ductus deferens. Alternately, the latter artery can be supplied by the inferior vesical artery in some individuals.

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    fetal circulatory system diagramoxygenated blood in fetal heart