Puneet Varma (Editor)

Endocardial cushions

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Carnegie stage
  
14

Precursor
  
Lateral plate mesoderm

Code
  
TE E5.11.1.6.0.0.4

Days
  
27

Gives rise to
  
Septum intermedium

Endocardial cushions

Latin
  
Tubera endocardiaca atrioventricularia

Endocardial cushions, or atrioventricular cushions, refer to a subset of cells in the development of the heart that play a vital role in the proper formation of the heart septa.

Contents

They develop on the atrioventricular canal and conotruncal region of the bulbus cordis.

During heart development, the heart starts out as a tube. As heart development continues this tube undergoes conformational changes and remodeling to eventually form the four-chambered heart. The endocardial cushions are a subset of cells found in the developing heart tube that will give rise to the heart's valves and septa critical to the proper formation of a four-chambered heart.

Clinical significance

A problem in endocardial cushion development or remodeling is thought to be associated with atrioventricular septal defect.

Development

The endocardial cushions are thought to arise from a subset of endothelial cells that undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition, a process whereby these cells break cell-to-cell contacts and migrate into the cardiac jelly (towards the interior of the heart tube). These migrated cells form the "swellings" called the endocardial cushions seen in the heart tube.

Upon sectioning of the heart the atrioventricular endocardial cushions can be observed in the lumen of the atrial canal as two thickenings, one on its dorsal and another on its ventral wall. These thickenings will go on to fuse and remodel to eventually form the valves and septa of the mature adult heart.

References

Endocardial cushions Wikipedia