Many facial components such as the ears, parts of the nose as well as the jaw, the teeth and salivary glands arise from the pharyngeal portions of the foregut, among others. That is why an understanding of the development of this region is important.
The embryonic foregut (stage 8, ca. 23 days, 8) dead-ends in the cranial region below the very rapidly growing brain. Together with the ectoderm, which covers the embryo, it forms the oropharyngeal membrane that, however, is soon torn (stage 11, ca. 29 days, 11). A connection between the foregut and the amniotic cavity has arisen and it is now termed the stomodeum (see Fig. 3). During the flexions of the embryo in the following days (the strongest occurring in stage 14, ca. 32 days, 14) accumulations of mesenchyma occur in the region of the foregut on both sides, which then become the pharyngeal arches. They are separated, one from the other, by the pharyngeal folds that, on the inside, border on the foregut endoderm (pharyngeal pouches).
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