The pulmonary veins
The pulmonary veins are not assigned to any of the three systems just mentioned because they develop independently. There is no consensus about whether the pulmonary vein as a branch from the left atrium obtains a connection to the lung plexus or the pulmonary vein forms as a solitary vessel in the dorsal mesocardium and is only secondarily incorporated into the atrium. In either case, with the further development of the heart, more and more of the pulmonary veins are incorporated into the left atrium, so that at the end of the embryonic period 4 independent pulmonary veins empty into the atrium.

- Septum spurium
- Inlet of the sinus venosus
- Dorsal septum atrio-ventriculare
- Sulcus atrio-ventricularis
- Atrium
- Ventricle

- Incorporation of the sinus venosus into the right atrium
- Pulmonary veins
- Incorporation of the pulmonary veins into the left atrium
Initially, only one pulmonary vein empties into the left atrium.
Fig. 25More and more of the sinus venosus and the pulmonary vein become incorporated into the atrium.

- Incorporation of the sinus venosus into the right atrium
- Pulmonary veins
- Incorporation of the pulmonary veins into the left atrium

- Incorporation of the sinus venosus into the right atrium
- Pulmonary veins
- Incorporation of the four pulmonary veins into the left atrium
With time the two pulmonary veins empty separately into the left atrium-
Fig. 27In stage 15 the 4 pulmonary veins empty into the left atrium.
The latest research shows that the pulmonary veins arise as solitary vessels in the mesenchyma of the mediasatinum and canalize the blood of the pulmonary vein plexus into the heart. The individual pulmonary veins that have been engendered become incorporated into the left atrium and finally 4 independent pulmonary veins empty into the heart