The left atrium of the heart forms from two sources:
The fusion of the primitive pulmonary vein with the pulmonary veins derived from the lung buds may stop prematurely or progress excessively. This may lead to, respectively, only one main pulmonary vein or five to six entering the left atrium. Three veins instead of four is the most common deviation from the normal pattern. Usually, two or fewer veins entering the left atrium is associated with gross cardiac abnormalities and fetal abortion.
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