Skip to main content
Top
Published in: Anatomical Science International 3/2009

01-09-2009 | Special Issue on Cardiovascular Development

Cardiovascular development: structure and molecular mechanism

Author: Yuji Nakajima

Published in: Anatomical Science International | Issue 3/2009

Login to get access

Excerpt

For more than 100 years, anatomists, physiologists, biologists, pathologists, oncologists, and cardiologists have been fascinated by the study of cardiovascular development. The cardiovascular system, which consists of many cell types, such as endothelial cells, myocardial cells, and smooth muscle cells, to name only a few, develops from the mesoderm and the ectomesenchyme. The circulatory system is established and functions at the earliest stage of development as it is essential for normal embryonic development. In the clinical field of pediatric cardiology, there are a number of congenital heart defects that are commonly diagnosed in about 1% of live births. In other clinical fields, angiogenesis and lymphangiogenesis are critical processes because they influence the invasiveness of cancer as well as the survival of transplanted grafts. We often see cardiovascular anomalies in human bodies in the dissection lab as well as in genetically engineered mutant animals. To date, many Japanese scientists have investigated and made landmark discoveries in this field. In 1978, Professor Atsuyoshi Takao (1925–2006), who was the first pediatric cardiologist in Japan, initiated international symposia on cardiovascular development, which developed into a long-lasting series. The proceedings of these symposia illustrate the rapid and remarkable progress that has been made in this field. …
Metadata
Title
Cardiovascular development: structure and molecular mechanism
Author
Yuji Nakajima
Publication date
01-09-2009
Publisher
Springer Japan
Published in
Anatomical Science International / Issue 3/2009
Print ISSN: 1447-6959
Electronic ISSN: 1447-073X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12565-009-0041-2

Other articles of this Issue 3/2009

Anatomical Science International 3/2009 Go to the issue