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The small intestine develops from the digestive tube, which exists ventrally in the developing embryo. The digestive tube is endoderm, and therefore the small intestine and it's associated glands develop primarily from endoderm. Splanchnic mesoderm surrounds the digestive tube and gives rise to muscles of the tunica muscularis (for peristalsis), blood vessels in the submucosa and connective tissue of the serosa.  
 
The small intestine develops from the digestive tube, which exists ventrally in the developing embryo. The digestive tube is endoderm, and therefore the small intestine and it's associated glands develop primarily from endoderm. Splanchnic mesoderm surrounds the digestive tube and gives rise to muscles of the tunica muscularis (for peristalsis), blood vessels in the submucosa and connective tissue of the serosa.  
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The intestines begin as a straight tube, suspended by the dorsal mesentry. It then loops ventrally. This then slips out of the abdomen into the umbilical cord where growth continues. The cranial loop becomes the small intestine. It elongates and becomes extensively coiled. It then undergoes a 270° rotation about the cranial mesenteric artery so that the caecum ends up on the right.
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The intestines begin as a straight tube, suspended by the dorsal mesentry. They then loop ventrally. This slips out of the abdomen into the umbilical cord where growth continues. The cranial loop becomes the small intestine. It elongates and becomes extensively coiled. It then undergoes a 270° rotation about the cranial mesenteric artery so that the caecum ends up on the right.
    
PICTURE
 
PICTURE
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