William Harvey's

On the Motion of the Heart and Blood in Animals



Harvey shed great light on the passage of blood from the arteries to the veins when he discovered two very important differences in the vascular anatomy of the fetus: that there are blood pathways from the vena cava to the pulmonary vein and from the pulmonary artery to the aorta that are not present after birth. In the fetus, there is a small orifice called the foramen ovale in the septum that allows some blood to pass directly from the right atrium to the left atrium when the atria contract. When the right ventricle contracts, it sends blood out through the pulmonary artery, where, in adults, it would flow to the lungs. In the fetus, however, there is a shunt called the ductus arteriosus which allows the blood ejected from the right ventricle to bypass the lungs and enter directly into the aorta. These two shunts prevent most of the blood from flowing to the lungs, which are not operational in the womb for obvious reasons.





Upon birth, the lungs begin to function, which triggers the closing of the two shunts, and the circulatory system begins to function in the manner observed in postnatal and adult subjects. What this means is that because the blood no longer flows directly from the venous to arterial system, the newly functional lungs, no longer shunted out of the system, must be the point of connection between the venous and arterial systems. Unsure of the purpose of the blood flowing through the lungs, Harvey speculates that it is to cool the blood, but he says that this is a different subject.

 

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