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Great arteries

The great arteries are the primary arteries that carry blood away from the heart, which include: The great arteries are the primary arteries that carry blood away from the heart, which include: The great arteries originate from the aortic arches during embryonic development. The aortic arches start as five pairs of symmetrical vessels connecting the heart with the dorsal aorta but then undergo a significant remodelling, in which some of these vessels regress (aortic arches 1 and 2), the 3rd pair of arches contribute to form the common carotids, the right 4th will contribute to the base and central part of the right subclavian artery, while the left 4th will form the central portion of the aortic arch. The 5th pair of vessels only form in some cases without any known contribution to the final structure of the great arteries. The right 6th almost completely regresses with only the proximal part contributing to the base of the pulmonary arteries, while the left 6th forms the ductus arteriosus, which disappears after birth.

[ "Ventricle", "Heart disease", "Transposition (music)", "Straddling tricuspid valve", "Complete transposition", "Bulboventricular foramen", "Supravalvular pulmonary stenosis", "Discordant ventriculoarterial connection" ]
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