# circulation and circulatory changes at birth

circulation and circulatory changes at birth

- By 12 weeks of  fetal life the primitive vascular tube is fully developed. Fetal circulation di ﬀ ers from that of the adult in that the right and left ventricles pump blood in parallel rather than in series. This arrangement allows the heart and head to receive more highly oxygenated blood. This is possible because - of  the presence of  three structural shunts: the ductus venosus, foramen ovale and ductus arteriosus ( Figure 59.21 ). Soon after birth, pulmonary vascular resistance falls because of  the action of  breathing and resulting pulmonary vasodilatation. Within 30 minutes of  delivery , the ductus arte - riosus constricts in r esponse to increasing blood oxygen levels. The result is a reversal of  the pulmonary–systemic pressure - gradient and termination of blood ﬂow from the pulmonary - artery into the aorta. After birth, cutting and tying of  the umbilical cord stops venous blood ﬂow from the placenta. This lowers inferior vena ca va pressure and, with falling pulmonary vascular resistance, right atrial pressure falls. The result is closure of  the foramen ovale. The abolition of  venous return from the placenta also - causes the ductus venosus to close. Closure of  the fetal circulatory shunts in the few hours following birth is functional, with complete structural closure typically taking several months. In 20% of  adults the structural - closure of  the f oramen ovale remains incomplete, but is of  no cardiovascular signiﬁcance. Abnormalities of  cardiac structure may arise from the per - sistence of  normal fetal channels (PDA, patent foramen ovale), failure of  septation (atrial septal defect [ASD], VSD, tetral - ogy of  Fallot), stenosis (intracardiac, supravalvular, valvular, infra valvular or extracardiac coarctation of the aorta), atresia or abnormal connections (transposition of  the g reat vessels (TGV), total anomalous venous drainage). Fetal echocardiog raphy is now su ﬃ ciently sensitive to detect intracardiac lesions in the second trimester. 

Ductus
arteriosus
Foramen
ovale
Ductus
venosus
Figure 59.21
Fetal circulation.