Development of the ventral body wall in the human embryo

H.K. Mekonen, J.P. Hikspoors, G. Mommen, S.E. Köhler, W.H. Lamers*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Migratory failure of somitic cells is the commonest explanation for ventral body wall defects. However, the embryo increases ~ 25-fold in volume in the period that the ventral body wall forms, so that differential growth may, instead, account for the observed changes in topography. Human embryos between 4 and 10 weeks of development were studied, using amira((R)) reconstruction and cinema 4D((R)) remodeling software for visualization. Initially, vertebrae and ribs had formed medially, and primordia of sternum and hypaxial flank muscle primordium laterally in the body wall at Carnegie Stage (CS)15 (5.5 weeks). The next week, ribs and muscle primordium expanded in ventrolateral direction only. At CS18 (6.5 weeks), separate intercostal and abdominal wall muscles differentiated, and ribs, sterna, and muscles began to expand ventromedially and caudally, with the bilateral sternal bars fusing in the midline after CS20 (7 weeks) and the rectus muscles reaching the umbilicus at CS23 (8 weeks). The near-constant absolute distance between both rectus muscles and approximately fivefold decline of this distance relative to body circumference between 6 and 10 weeks identified dorsoventral growth in the dorsal body wall as determinant of the 'closure' of the ventral body wall. Concomitant with the straightening of the embryonic body axis after the 6th week, the abdominal muscles expanded ventrally and caudally to form the infraumbilical body wall. Our data, therefore, show that the ventral body wall is formed by differential dorsoventral growth in the dorsal part of the body.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)673-685
Number of pages13
JournalJournal of Anatomy
Volume227
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2015

Keywords

  • abdominal muscles
  • dorsoventral differential growth
  • infraumbilical body wall
  • ventral body wall
  • LATERAL SOMITIC FRONTIER
  • PRUNE-BELLY-SYNDROME
  • BIRTH-DEFECTS SURVEILLANCE
  • TISSUE-SPECIFIC ANTIGENS
  • DEVELOPING HUMAN HEART
  • STAGED HUMAN EMBRYOS
  • SKELETAL-MUSCLE
  • ABDOMINAL-WALL
  • IMMUNOHISTOCHEMICAL ANALYSIS
  • INTERNATIONAL CLEARINGHOUSE

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