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7 - Terminology of Errors of Morphogenesis

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2010

Enid Gilbert-Barness
Affiliation:
University of South Florida and University of Wisconsin Medical School
Diane Debich-Spicer
Affiliation:
University of South Florida
John M. Opitz
Affiliation:
University of Utah
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Summary

MALFORMATION

A malformation is a qualitative, structural end result of a disturbance of embryogenesis leading to a (congenital) defect of an organ, body part, or body region. Such defects can be mild or severe, common or rare. They arise either during blastogenesis (first 4 weeks of development) or during organogenesis (2nd half of embryogenesis, weeks 5-8). Defects of blastogenesis tend to be severe, to be frequently lethal, and to involve several parts of the developing organism sharing a common inductive molecular pathway (polytopic anomalies; i.e., DiGeorge anomaly) (Figure 7.1 and Tables 7.1 to 7.5). Defects of organogenesis tend to involve single structures (monotopic anomalies) – i.e., isolated polydactly, cleft palate, distal hypospadias, etc. Regardless of how mild or common in the population, malformations are never normal. Mild malformations (cleft uvula or xiphisternum, agenesis of palmaris longus muscle or of upper lateral incisors, spina bifida occulta of L5) are common in the population and tend to be dominantly inherited.

Developmental Fields

Developmental (or embryogenic or morphogenetic) fields are the parts of the embryo that react as a unit in response to normal inductive, teratogenic, or mutational causes (Tables 7.6 and 7.7). During early blastogenesis the entire pluripotent embryo is the primary field. A midline, axis formation and the initial events of gastrulation are its most important morphogenetic characteristics. Progenitor fields (Davidson) arise in the primary field and represent upstream expression domains of combinations of molecular inductive systems including transcription factors (e.g., HOX, SOX, TBX genes), growth factors (FGF, BMPs), and secreted morphogens (i.e., SHH).

Type
Chapter
Information
Embryo and Fetal Pathology
Color Atlas with Ultrasound Correlation
, pp. 207 - 226
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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