ARTICLE FIFTH.
DEVELOPMENT OF THE VASCULAR SYSTEM WITH RED BLOOD.

I. State of this system in the Fœtus.

The fœtus differs essentially from the infant that has breathed, in this, that its two great vascular systems in reality form but one, since the foramen ovale on the one hand, and the ductus arteriosus on the other, form a direct communication between the two. This communication is much more evident at the period nearest conception; these openings contract towards the period of birth. 1st. The foramen ovale is formed, in the first months, by two productions in the form of a crescent, whose concave surfaces are opposite, and leave between them an oval space, which is constantly contracting, because these two productions constantly approximate and have a tendency to cross each other, which in fact takes place after birth. 2d. The ductus arteriosus contracts as the pulmonary artery dilates.

While these two openings are free, which is constantly the case in the fœtus, the two systems evidently make but one, as I have said; whence it clearly follows that the blood that circulates there must be entirely of the same nature, that there cannot be two kinds in the fœtus, as there always is in the adult. This is, in fact, a remarkable difference between the two ages. 1st. I have many times dissected small Guinea pigs in the womb of the mother; their vessels have uniformly contained the same fluid, which is blackish, like the venous blood of the adult. This experiment is easy. The abdomen of the mother being divided, we successively open each of the separate sacs that the womb has for each fœtus. When one of these sacs is laid open, we cut the membranes, then the abdomen of the small animal, leaving the umbilical vessels untouched. The transparency of the parts easily allows us to see the uniformity of the colour of the blood of the vena cava and the aorta. The same remark applies to the superior parts. The carotid and jugular pour out the same blood when they are opened. 2d. I have three times made the same observation upon the fœtus of a dog. 3d. We know that the blood of the umbilical arteries is always black; all accoucheurs have remarked this. 4th. The change of the black blood to red arises from the contact of air in the lungs; the fœtus not breathing, cannot then have this kind of blood. 5th. I have dissected many fœtuses that have died in the womb of the mother; the blood of the veins and the arteries has appeared to me to be uniformly the same. It is true that this is not a very conclusive proof, since the mere standing of the red blood in the vessels, for a considerable length of time, is sufficient to make it black, as Hunter has observed.

The preceding facts are sufficient to establish incontestibly the uniformity of the blood in the two systems of the fœtus; an uniformity that exists at least in external appearance, if it is not real in its intimate composition. It is for the chemists to elucidate this point.

How is it, that the instant the black blood enters the system of red blood in the adult, alarming consequences follow, soon asphyxia, then death, take place, whilst in the fœtus, the black blood circulates with impunity in the arteries? It is a difficult question to resolve, and yet these two contradictory facts are equally true. The difference of the nature of the blood of the fœtus might perhaps serve to remove this difficulty, if we better understood this difference. In fact, though the colour assimilates this blood with that of the veins of the adult, yet it does not appear to be the same; it has an unctuous feel, unlike the other. It is never found in the dead body coagulated like it, but always fluid, like the blood of those who have died of asphyxia. Fourcroy discovered no fibrin in it; he observed that it did not take the vermilion colour by the contact of the air; that it contained no phosphoric salts, &c. It is then very probable that if the black blood is fatal in the arteries of the adult, whilst it circulates with impunity in those of the fœtus, that it arises from the difference of the nature of the one and the other. Besides, observe that there is a very great difference in the functions of the fœtus and the adult. The first scarcely has animal life; it wants many functions of organic. The relation of the organs with each other, is of a nature wholly different from what it will be after birth. No kind of analogy ever can be established between the fœtus and the infant in this respect. Thus we have observed that the experiments upon life and death give a result wholly different in animals with red and warm blood, and in those with red and cold, which approximate nearly the organization of the fœtus in some respects. We cannot then establish any kind of parallel in respect to the injury of the respiratory phenomena, between the fœtus and the infant, an injury, the causes of which I have sought in my experiments, since the organization relative to these phenomena differ so essentially in the one and the other.

Although, as I have said, the blood of the two vascular systems is confounded in the fœtus, yet there is, especially in the first periods, a kind of separation in the general mass of blood, a separation that was first accurately observed by Sabatier, and which is the result of the arrangement of the foramen ovale and the ductus arteriosus. This separation divides the mass of blood into two. The following is the manner in which the circulation of the blood is performed in this respect.

1st. All the blood that the trunk of the inferior vena cava receives, either from the capillary system of the inferior extremities, or from that of the abdomen, or from the placenta by the umbilical vein, instead of stopping in the right auricle, as in the adult, passes entire into the left through the foramen ovale, the superior edge of which is so arranged, that nothing can mix with the blood of the superior vena cava; so that when we examine attentively, we see that it is really with the left auricle that the inferior vena cava is continued. Hence why this auricle is in proportion as much dilated as the right; for it would be very contracted, if it had only to receive the blood of the pulmonary veins, the quantity of which is merely nothing in the first periods of life. From this auricle the blood passes to the left ventricle, which transmits it to the aorta, where it meets the carotids and subclavians, which, by numerous ramifications, carry it to the capillary system of the head and the superior extremities.

2d. After having remained in this system, the blood returns by the different branches of the superior vena cava to the right auricle, where the superior edge of the foramen ovale prevents it from communicating with the other blood; from this auricle it passes to the ventricle, which transmits it to the pulmonary artery, which sends a small part of it that returns to the left auricle by the veins of the same name, but transmits almost the whole of it by the ductus arteriosus to the descending aorta, below the origin of the carotids and the subclavians, which carry the other blood. This is carried by the branches and ramifications of the aorta to the capillary system of the abdomen and inferior extremities; the remainder is afterwards carried by the umbilical artery and lost in the placenta.

It follows from what we have just said, that notwithstanding the continuity of the two great sanguineous systems in the fœtus, there is in the first months after conception, a kind of separation of the blood they contain; that there is even if we may so say, two systems wholly different from those which will afterwards exist in a separate manner in the adult.