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Chronological and Morphological Study of Heart Development in the Rat
Journal
The Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology
ISSN
1932-8486
Date Issued
2012
Author(s)
Salazar García, Marcela
Revilla Monsalve, María Cristina
Palomino Garibay, Miguel Angel
Arteaga Martínez, Manuel
Díaz-Cintra, Sofía
De La Rosa-Santander, Patricia
Roque-Ramírez, Bladimir
Sánchez Gómez, Concepción
Type
Resource Types::text::journal::journal article
Abstract
Adult and embryonic laboratory rats have been used as a mammalian model organism in biomedical research, descriptive and experimental cardiac embryology, and experimental teratology. There have been, however, considerable variations and discrepancies concerning the developmental staging of the rat embryo in the reported literature, which have resulted in several controversies and inconsistencies. Therefore, we carried out a careful anatomical and histological study of rat cardiac morphogenesis from the premorphogenetic period to the mature heart in a newborn pup. A correlation between the chronology and morphological features of the heart and embryo or newborn was made. We provide a simple and comprehensive guide relating the developmental timing and fate of the embryonic components of the heart and their morphological changes in the rat based on in vivo labeling studies in the chick. We also compare the timing of heart development in rats, humans, and mice. Anat Rec, 2012. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.