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The development of the lungs explained in less than 10 minutes. If you are completely new to embryology and you want to understand it quickly, this should be the first video you watch: • Introduction to Embryology - Fertilis... Post any questions you have about the video below, I read all the comments: -------------------------------- Recommended Text -------------------------------- Easy Embryology is a book that is dedicated to the simplification of embryology. It is available at https://drminass.com/product/easyembr.... Contact Dr. Minass for more information. ---------------------------------------- Interact With Dr. Minass! ---------------------------------------- Website - https://www.drminass.com Email - [email protected] Patreon - / drminass Facebook - / m1na55 Instagram - @m1.nass Post - Address to: Minass Parcel Locker 10106 04448 59 Penshurst Street Willoughby, NSW Australia 2068 Summary for your notes: Formation of the lung buds: at 4 weeks of gestation, the respiratory diverticulum (lung bud) appears as an outgrowth from the ventral foregut. Retinoic acid from surrounding mesoderm is the initiating factor (as it causes up-regulation of transcription factor TBX4) - not spoken about in video to keep things simple. Epithelium of the lung is derived from foregut. Connective tissue, muscle, and cartilage is from splanchnic mesoderm. Parietal pleura is from somatic mesoderm; and visceral pleura is from splanchnic mesoderm. Tracheoesophageal ridges separate the lung bud from the foregut, and fuse to form a tracheoesophageal septum. Lung buds form bronchial buds which form into the right and left main bronchi. Growth is caudal and lateral to fill the pericardioperitoneal canals. 10 tertiary bronchi (segmental) are developed on the right, and 8 in the left. These correspond to the bronchopulmonary segments in an adult lung. Terminal bronchioles divide to form respiratory bronchioles and these divide into alveolar ducts. The terminal sacs are initially cuboidal epithelium but the distal portion become squamous as the vascular supply grows near it - these are the Type 1 alveoli. Type 2 produce surfactant. Congenital abnormalities: Esophageal atresia: abnormalities in partitioning of the oesophagus and trachea. Fistulas may also persist The three types spoken about in the video make up the most common types. The proximal blind ended esophagus, and a tracheoesophageal fistula to the distal part of the esopahgus is the most common type (90%). There are two other types which are much rarer (1% each) so it wasn't spoken about in the video. They include: (1) a proximal fistula, and a distal blind-ended esophagus, and (2) a fistula to the trachea from the esophagus both distally and proximally.