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Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 204-208 (January 1999)


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Esophageal atresia with tracheoesophageal fistula: Suggested mechanism in faulty organogenesis

Christopher A Crisera, Patrick R Connelly, Alexander R Marmureanu, Kari L Colen, Michael I Rose, Min Li, Michael T Longaker, George K GittesCorresponding Author Information

Abstract 

Background/Purpose: The organogenesis of esophageal atresia with tracheoesophageal fistula (EA-TEF) is unknown. Using an established model for EA-TEF in rats, the authors proposed to study this aberrancy of development in the hope of gaining insight into its mechanism of formation.

Methods: Pregnant Sprague-Dawley rats were injected with 2.2 mg/kg of Adriamycin intraperitoneally on days 6 through 9 of gestation. Using microdissection, the trachea, blind-ending esophagus, TEF, and stomach were isolated from embryos of various gestional ages. The specimens were analyzed histologically with routine H&E staining.

Results: The classic EA-TEF developed in the embryos, with proximal EA and distal TEF. As expected, the atresia formed as a blind-ending pouch, but the distal fistula began as an apparent equal trifurcation of the tracheal anlage into two mainstem bronchi and the fistula tract leading to the stomach. Histological analysis of the fistula tract showed respiratorylike pseudostratified columnar epithelium.

Conclusions: TEF develops as the middle branch of a tracheal trifurcation. EA-TEF occurs by a primary atresia of the esophagus. As a secondary phenomenon, the distal foregut anlage is switched toward the pulmonary phenotype. It trifurcates, and its middle branch grows caudally to fistulize into the stomach.

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Department of Surgery, New York University Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.

Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to George K. Gittes, MD, Laboratory of Developmental Biology and Repqir, Department of Surgery, New York University Medical Center, 530 First Ave, Suite 10W, New York, NY 10016.

 Presented at the 29th Annual Meeting of the American Pediatric Surgical Association, Hilton Head, South Carolina, May 10–13, 1998.

PII: S0022-3468(99)90258-0


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