1987
DOI: 10.1016/0167-5273(87)90033-7
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The quantitative anatomy of the normal human heart in fetal and perinatal life

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Cited by 26 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…It is particularly noteworthy that such progress has occurred despite a vacuum in anatomic details concerning the fetal heart and correlation of this information to prenatal echocardiographic data (De la Cruz et al, 1960;Schulz and Giordano, 1962;Van Meurs et al, 1977;Allan et al, 1980Allan et al, , 1984Allan et al, , 1997Alvarez et al, 1987Alvarez et al, , 1990Alvarez et al, , 1991Sun et al, 1999). It was this knowledge gap that led us to perform the present study using fetal hearts between the 13th and 20th weeks of gestation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…It is particularly noteworthy that such progress has occurred despite a vacuum in anatomic details concerning the fetal heart and correlation of this information to prenatal echocardiographic data (De la Cruz et al, 1960;Schulz and Giordano, 1962;Van Meurs et al, 1977;Allan et al, 1980Allan et al, , 1984Allan et al, , 1997Alvarez et al, 1987Alvarez et al, , 1990Alvarez et al, , 1991Sun et al, 1999). It was this knowledge gap that led us to perform the present study using fetal hearts between the 13th and 20th weeks of gestation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…At present, there are only a few published studies that report direct morphometric data on the fetal heart and these are rather incomplete (De la Cruz et al, 1960;Sinha et al, 1969;Van Meurs et al, 1977;Alvarez et al, 1987Alvarez et al, , 1990Alvarez et al, , 1991. In light of the current state of knowledge in this field, it seemed of scientific interest to perform a quantitative analysis of normal fetal hearts to improve our knowledge and understanding of heart anatomy during prenatal development and to provide accurate reference information for fetal echocardiography.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…The statistical power was Ͼ85% for all cases with nonsignificant differences in Tables 2 and 3 (aortic diameters and aortic distensibility in descending aorta and PWV) using effect size estimates, representative of the age-related progression of subclinical disease. 21 …”
Section: Distensibility Pwv and Rv Functionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Reasons for dilatation of the neoaorta in patients with HLHS after surgery can be attributed to the following constraints. First, the diameter of the pulmonary root, which is used to create the neoaortic root, is larger than the aortic root of healthy subjects 21,22 and determines the size of the neoaortic root. Second, the increased diameters of the ascending aorta and transverse aortic arch are a consequence of surgical implantation of the aortic patch to compensate for underdevelopment of these vascular structures.…”
Section: Aortic Dimensionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The heart grows with negative allometry during the embryonic period and with isometry during the 2nd and 3rd trimes ters together. The anatomogeometric configuration for each ventricle was described analyzing the human heart in fetal and perinatal life (Granada collection) in fetuses of up to 2,700 g in body weight: ventricular wall thickness was greater in the right than in the left ventricle, although the opposite was true in fetuses weighing above this weight [21].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%