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  2. Endocardium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocardium

    Moreover, the endothelium of the myocardial (heart muscle) capillaries, which is also closely appositioned to the cardiomyocytes (heart muscle cells), is involved in this modulatory role. [4] Thus, the cardiac endothelium (both the endocardial endothelium and the endothelium of the myocardial capillaries) controls the development of the heart ...

  3. Endocardial cushions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocardial_cushions

    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 ...

  4. Endocardial tubes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endocardial_tubes

    The endocardial tubes have an intimate proximity to the foregut or pharyngeal endoderm. [ 1 ] As folding of the embryo in the horizontal plane initiates in the 4th week of gestation, the endocardial tubes meet in the midline to form the primitive heart tube , which will eventually develop into the histologically definitive endocardium .

  5. Heart development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart_development

    This begins with the formation of two endocardial tubes which merge to form the tubular heart, also called the primitive heart tube. The heart is the first functional organ in vertebrate embryos . The tubular heart quickly differentiates into the truncus arteriosus , bulbus cordis , primitive ventricle , primitive atrium , and the sinus venosus .

  6. Purkinje fibers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purkinje_fibers

    The Purkinje fibers, named for Jan Evangelista Purkyně, (English: / p ɜːr ˈ k ɪ n dʒ i / pur-KIN-jee; [1] Czech: [ˈpurkɪɲɛ] ⓘ; Purkinje tissue or subendocardial branches) are located in the inner ventricular walls of the heart, [2] just beneath the endocardium in a space called the subendocardium.

  7. Protein signalling in heart development - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protein_signalling_in...

    The IV septum grows upward towards the endocardial cushion. As it grows, a foramen appears, the interventricular foramen , which later is closed by the non-muscular IV septum. Defects in producing the IV septum causes ventricular septal defects , which communicate both ventricles.

  8. Transvenous pacing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transvenous_pacing

    Transvenous cardiac pacing (TVP), [1] also called endocardial pacing, is a potentially life-saving intervention used primarily to correct profound bradycardia.It can be used to treat symptomatic bradycardias that do not respond to transcutaneous pacing or to drug therapy.

  9. Endomyocardial biopsy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endomyocardial_biopsy

    Monitoring during the procedure consists of performing ECGs and blood pressures. Guidance and confirmation of correct positioning of the bioptome is made by echocardiography or fluoroscopy [1] before the biopsy specimen is taken and in the case of transplants, usually three [4] or four or more samples are taken. [1]