## Correct Answer: B. Umbilical artery The umbilical artery is the sole vessel that carries deoxygenated blood from the fetus back to the placenta for gas exchange. In fetal circulation, the umbilical cord contains two umbilical arteries (branches of the internal iliac arteries) and one umbilical vein. The umbilical arteries arise from the fetal descending aorta via the internal iliac arteries and carry deoxygenated, nutrient-poor blood away from the fetus toward the placenta. This is the reverse of postnatal circulation where arteries carry oxygenated blood. The placenta acts as the fetal lung, kidney, and gastrointestinal tract combined—it receives deoxygenated fetal blood via the umbilical arteries, performs gas exchange, and returns oxygenated blood via the single umbilical vein. This anatomical arrangement is unique to fetal life and is essential for intrauterine survival. After birth, the umbilical arteries obliterate to form the medial umbilical ligaments (lateral umbilical ligaments in some texts). Understanding this bidirectional flow is critical for Indian pediatricians managing neonatal complications, umbilical artery catheterization (UAC) procedures, and interpreting fetal Doppler studies in high-risk pregnancies. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Pulmonary Artery** — This is wrong because in fetal life, the pulmonary artery does NOT carry blood to the lungs for oxygenation—the lungs are fluid-filled and non-functional. Instead, most blood from the right ventricle bypasses the lungs via the ductus arteriosus and enters the descending aorta. The pulmonary artery carries only a small fraction of blood to the non-functional fetal lungs. This option confuses postnatal physiology (where pulmonary artery carries deoxygenated blood to lungs) with fetal physiology. **C. Umbilical Vein** — This is wrong because the umbilical vein carries OXYGENATED blood FROM the placenta TO the fetus, not deoxygenated blood back to the placenta. The umbilical vein is a single vessel that enters the fetus at the umbilicus, passes through the liver (with some blood shunting via the ductus venosus), and delivers oxygen-rich blood to the fetal circulation. Confusing the direction of flow in umbilical vessels is a classic NBE trap for students who memorize vessel names without understanding fetal hemodynamics. **D. Descending aorta** — This is wrong because the descending aorta is a systemic vessel that distributes blood throughout the fetal body, not a vessel that returns blood to the placenta. While the umbilical arteries DO originate from the descending aorta via the internal iliac arteries, the descending aorta itself is not the vessel carrying blood back to the placenta. This option tests whether students confuse the origin of umbilical arteries with the umbilical arteries themselves. ## High-Yield Facts - **Umbilical arteries (two)** carry deoxygenated blood from fetus to placenta; originate from internal iliac arteries (branches of descending aorta). - **Umbilical vein (one)** carries oxygenated blood from placenta to fetus; enters liver and partially shunts via ductus venosus. - **Ductus venosus** allows umbilical venous blood to bypass hepatic circulation and enter the inferior vena cava directly in ~50% of fetal cardiac output. - **Ductus arteriosus** shunts blood from pulmonary artery to descending aorta, bypassing non-functional fetal lungs. - **Foramen ovale** allows right-to-left shunting from right atrium to left atrium, bypassing the non-functional fetal lungs. - After birth, umbilical arteries obliterate to form **medial umbilical ligaments** (also called lateral umbilical ligaments); umbilical vein becomes **ligamentum venosus**. ## Mnemonics **FETAL BLOOD FLOW: AVO** **A**rteries carry deoxygenated blood away from fetus to placenta (Umbilical Arteries = 2). **V**ein carries oxygenated blood into fetus from placenta (Umbilical Vein = 1). **O**xygen exchange happens at placenta. Use this when remembering which umbilical vessel does what. **SHUNTS IN FETAL LIFE: DVF** **D**uctus **V**enosus (umbilical vein → IVC, bypasses liver). **D**uctus **A**rteriosus (pulmonary artery → aorta, bypasses lungs). **F**oramen **O**vale (RA → LA, bypasses lungs). These three shunts make fetal circulation unique. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "umbilical artery" and "umbilical vein" as distractors to trap students who confuse directional flow. Students often think "vein = carries blood back" without considering that in fetal circulation, the umbilical vein carries oxygenated blood INTO the fetus, while the umbilical arteries carry deoxygenated blood OUT to the placenta—the opposite of systemic circulation. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian neonatal intensive care units, umbilical artery catheterization (UAC) is a routine procedure for continuous blood pressure monitoring and blood sampling in critically ill neonates. The UAC is placed by advancing a catheter through one of the two umbilical arteries—this is only possible because these arteries carry blood away from the fetus toward the placenta, making them accessible from the umbilical stump. Misunderstanding fetal vascular anatomy can lead to catheter malposition or vascular complications. _Reference: OP Ghai Pediatrics Ch. 2 (Fetal Circulation); Harrison Ch. 295 (Congenital Heart Disease); Guyton Physiology Ch. 84 (Fetal and Neonatal Physiology)_
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