Leiden-Delft-Groningen - 3D model Tricuspid atresia after Unilateral Fontan Procedure - numbered English labels

nid: 58652
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This model shows atresia of the tricuspid valve. The tricuspid valve, usually situated between the right atrium and the right ventricle, was not constructed. Because of this, there is a decreased blood flow, which has resulted in the suboptimal development of the right ventricle. Hence the small (hypoplastic) right ventricle. Since the right ventricle cannot pump the blood into the lungs, the blood has to get there in a different way. This is accomplished by surgery: the Fontan procedure. The surgeon attaches all vessels that usually go to the right atrium directly to the lungs. Those vessels contain oxygen-poor blood from the upper part of the body (Superior Vena Cava) and the lower part of the body (Inferior Vena Cava) and are attached directly to the lungs via a tunnel, the Fontan tunnel. Oxygen is bound to the blood cells in the lungs. This oxygen-rich blood then enters the left atrium, the right ventricle and is pumped by the left ventricle into the body. A 3D model in a series of heart models that were made in collaboration between cardiologists, anatomists, medical illustrators and technical experts of the Universities of Groningen, Leiden and Delft, the Netherlands.
Anatomical structures in item:
Cor
Ventriculus sinister
Ventriculus dexter
Atrium dextrum
Atrium sinistrum
Vena cava inferior
Vena cava superior
Truncus pulmonalis
Venae pulmonales
Aorta
Aorta ascendens
Pulmones
Uploaded by: opgobee Netherlands, Leiden – Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University
Creator(s)/credit: Anna Sieben BM, MSc, medical artist and scientific illustrator, UMCG; Monique R.M. Jongbloed MD, PhD, cardiologist, anatomist, LUMC; Ludo de Goeje; Bonnie Schaafsma, Designer; Bert J. Wisse, Senior Research Technician, LUMC
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Leiden-Delft-Groningen - 3D model Tricuspid atresia after Unilateral Fontan Procedure - numbered English labels
Uploaded by: opgobee
Institution: Netherlands, Leiden – Leiden University Medical Center, Leiden University
Creator(s)/credit: Anna Sieben BM, MSc, medical artist and scientific illustrator, UMCG; Monique R.M. Jongbloed MD, PhD, cardiologist, anatomist, LUMC; Ludo de Goeje; Bonnie Schaafsma, Designer; Bert J. Wisse, Senior Research Technician, LUMC
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This model shows atresia of the tricuspid valve. The tricuspid valve, usually situated between the right atrium and the right ventricle, was not constructed. Because of this, there is a decreased blood flow, which has resulted in the suboptimal development of the right ventricle. Hence the small (hypoplastic) right ventricle. Since the right ventricle cannot pump the blood into the lungs, the blood has to get there in a different way. This is accomplished by surgery: the Fontan procedure. The surgeon attaches all vessels that usually go to the right atrium directly to the lungs. Those vessels contain oxygen-poor blood from the upper part of the body (Superior Vena Cava) and the lower part of the body (Inferior Vena Cava) and are attached directly to the lungs via a tunnel, the Fontan tunnel. Oxygen is bound to the blood cells in the lungs. This oxygen-rich blood then enters the left atrium, the right ventricle and is pumped by the left ventricle into the body. A 3D model in a series of heart models that were made in collaboration between cardiologists, anatomists, medical illustrators and technical experts of the Universities of Groningen, Leiden and Delft, the Netherlands.
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Language
EN
Educational level
+ + +
Technical info
Item id ('nid'): 58652
Online presentation
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Anatomical structures in item
Cor
Ventriculus sinister
Ventriculus dexter
Atrium dextrum
Atrium sinistrum
Vena cava inferior
Vena cava superior
Truncus pulmonalis
Venae pulmonales
Aorta
Aorta ascendens
Pulmones
Topics
Gross
Embryology
Clinical anatomy
Pathology
Variation
Clinical discipline
Cardiology