RT Book, Section A1 Miller, Walter L. A2 Kline, Mark W. SR Print(0) ID 1182919551 T1 The Adrenal Cortex T2 Rudolph's Pediatrics, 23e YR 2018 FD 2018 PB McGraw-Hill Education PP New York, NY SN 9781259588594 LK accesspediatrics.mhmedical.com/content.aspx?aid=1182919551 RD 2024/04/25 AB Human embryonic mesodermal adrenogonadal progenitor cells, which give rise to the steroidogenic cells of the gonads and the adrenal cortex, first appear around the fourth week of gestation between the urogenital ridge and dorsal mesentery. The adrenal and gonadal cells then separate; the adrenal cells migrate retroperitoneally to the cranial pole of the mesonephros, and the gonadal cells migrate caudally. Between the seventh and eighth weeks of development, sympathetic neuroectodermal cells from the neural crest invade the primitive adrenal and become the adrenal medulla. By the end of the eighth week, the rudimentary adrenal has become encapsulated and is associated with the upper pole of the kidney, which at this time is much smaller than the adrenal.