ANAT2341 Lab 11: Difference between revisions

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{{ANAT2341Lab11}}
==Introduction==


Important Note - [[Lecture - Heart Development|Heart Development]] is the lecture that was lost by the 3 Oct Public Holiday. It is therefore considered lecture theory and examinable in the final theory exam.
==1. QUIZ==


==2. Guest Lecturer Dr. Stephen Palmer (Novogen) - "Lysosomal storage disorders cause developmental abnormalities of the musculoskeletal system and CNS"==


[[File:Stephen_Palmer_profile_photo.jpg]]


[[Lecture - Heart Development]]
Dr Stephen Palmer is a Program Director at Novogen Ltd and Conjoint Senior Lecturer at UNSW Australia. He is a former member of the Cellular and Genetic Medicine Unit in the School of Medical Sciences with research interests in understanding the role of the gene GTF2IRD1 in brain development and human behaviour and its contribution towards the characteristic features of Williams-Beuren syndrome. Stephen Palmer completed his PhD at University College London in 1992 and was awarded an MRC Postdoctoral Training Fellowship to work with Alan Ashworth at the Institute of Cancer Research. In 1997, he came to Australia on a Wellcome Trust International Travelling Fellowship, to work with Richard Harvey at the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute. After a brief spell back in the UK, Stephen returned to Australia in 2002, joining Edna Hardeman at the Children's Medical Research Institute and then on to UNSW Australia in 2009.
 
 
 
{|
|
 
# [[Lecture - Heart Development|Practical - Heart Development]] - In today's practical we will work through the major changes that occur during human heart development.  
# [[ANAT2341_Lab_11_-_Heart Abnormalities|Heart Abnormalities]] - this will the be looked at in the context of developmental heart abnormalities (also called Congenital Heart Defects, CHD).
 
 
[[File:Advanced_Heart_Development_Timeline.jpg|600px]]
 
| valign=top|[[File:Heart1_atrium.gif]]
|}
 
==References==
===UNSW Embryology===
{|
| [[File:Logo.png|90px]]
| Hill, M.A. (2012) <i>UNSW Embryology</i> (12<sup>th</sup> ed.). Sydney:UNSW.
 
{{Heart Links}}
 
 
[[Cardiac_Embryology|Heart Tutorial]]
|}
 
 
===The Developing Human: Clinically Oriented Embryology===
{|
|-
| [[File:The Developing Human, 9th edn.jpg|90px]]
| '''Citation:''' The Developing Human: clinically oriented embryology 9<sup>th</sup> ed. Keith L. Moore, T.V.N. Persaud, Mark G. Torchia. Philadelphia, PA: Saunders, 2011. (links available to UNSW students)
* [http://er.library.unsw.edu.au/er/cgi-bin/eraccess.cgi?url=http://www.mdconsult.com/books/page.do?eid=4-u1.0-B978-1-4377-2002-0..00013-8&isbn=978-1-4377-2002-0&uniqId=330028653-2#4-u1.0-B978-1-4377-2002-0..00013-8 Chapter 13 - Cardiovascular System]
|}
===Larsen's Human Embryology===
{| border='0px'
|-
| [[File:Larsen's human embryology 4th edn.jpg|90px]]
| '''Citation:''' Larsen's human embryology 4th ed. Schoenwolf, Gary C; Larsen, William J, (William James). Philadelphia, PA : Elsevier/Churchill Livingstone, c2009. (links available to UNSW students)
* [http://er.library.unsw.edu.au/er/cgi-bin/eraccess.cgi?url=http://www.mdconsult.com/books/linkTo?type=bookPage&isbn=978-0-443-06811-9&eid=4-u1.0-B978-0-443-06811-9..10012-0 Chapter 12 - Development of the Heart]
 
* [http://er.library.unsw.edu.au/er/cgi-bin/eraccess.cgi?url=http://www.mdconsult.com/books/linkTo?type=bookPage&isbn=978-0-443-06811-9&eid=4-u1.0-B978-0-443-06811-9..10013-2 Chapter 13 - Development of the Vasculature]
|}
 
:'''Links:''' [[Embryology Textbooks]]
===Reviews===
 
<pubmed>18295570</pubmed>| [http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2507768 PMC2507768]
 
 
{{ANAT2341Lab11}}
 
{{Heart Links}}
{{Glossary}}
 
{{2016ANAT2341 footer}}

Revision as of 12:36, 13 December 2016

1. QUIZ

2. Guest Lecturer Dr. Stephen Palmer (Novogen) - "Lysosomal storage disorders cause developmental abnormalities of the musculoskeletal system and CNS"

Stephen Palmer profile photo.jpg

Dr Stephen Palmer is a Program Director at Novogen Ltd and Conjoint Senior Lecturer at UNSW Australia. He is a former member of the Cellular and Genetic Medicine Unit in the School of Medical Sciences with research interests in understanding the role of the gene GTF2IRD1 in brain development and human behaviour and its contribution towards the characteristic features of Williams-Beuren syndrome. Stephen Palmer completed his PhD at University College London in 1992 and was awarded an MRC Postdoctoral Training Fellowship to work with Alan Ashworth at the Institute of Cancer Research. In 1997, he came to Australia on a Wellcome Trust International Travelling Fellowship, to work with Richard Harvey at the Victor Chang Cardiac Research Institute. After a brief spell back in the UK, Stephen returned to Australia in 2002, joining Edna Hardeman at the Children's Medical Research Institute and then on to UNSW Australia in 2009.