Biology, asked by Anonymous, 1 year ago

plz give me the notes on internal structure of heart....??

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
8
hey mate here is ur ans

heart is made of cardiac muscles

the main parts of the hearts are the chambers namely Auricle and ventricle

Auricle refers to the upper part
ventricles refer to the lower part

human heart has 4 chambers
the Auricles are divided by a muscular boundary called inter auricular septum
similarly ventricles are separated by inter ventricular septum

the pace maker is located in the back wall of the left Auricle which controls the heart beat
it is also know as syno -auricular node

the left Auricle and left ventricle has the mitral valve or bicuspid valve in between

the right Auricle and right ventricle has the tricuspid valve in between

( trick to remember this
Right Auricle and ventricle --- main letter R(right)
T is very close to R (R, S, T)
T stands for tricuspid valve )

the aorta and pulmonary artery have semilunar valves

see the diagram for info






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Answered by sweetandsimple64
3
hey here is your answer

The heart is a strong muscular pump that circulates and pumps about 2,000 gallons of blood each day and contracts and expands about 100,000 times per day. The normal heart is only as big as an average clenched fist and sits behind the breast bone, or sternum, slightly to the left in between the lungs. Large blood vessels leave and enter the heart and help to keep it in position. The internal structure of the heart consists of four hollow spaces, or chambers, divided by a tissue wall, called the cardiac septum. The flow of blood through the heart is regulated by four valves.

Cardiac Septum

A muscular tissue, the cardiac septum, divides the heart into a right and left side. Each side of the heart has an upper chamber or atrium, and a larger, lower chamber, or ventricle. The two sides of the heart have different functions, but they work together to shuttle the blood to all parts of the body.

Chambers

The right atrium is a thin-walled chamber that receives oxygen-poor, or deoxygenated, blood from the upper and lower parts of the body. It also receives deoxygenated blood from the muscular walls of the heart.

The right ventricle fills with the deoxygenated blood from the right atrium and pushes the blood into the pulmonary arteries, which lead into the lungs. The blood is oxygenated in the lungs.

The left atrium is also a thin-walled chamber that receives oxygenated blood from the lungs by means of four pulmonary veins.

The left ventricle has a very thick muscular wall. When this ventricle contracts, oxygenated blood is forced through the aorta and its artery branches to all parts of the body.

Valves

The heart has four valves that open to let the blood flow when the heart contracts. Each valve has a set of flaps, called cusps or leaflets. The valves allow the blood to flow in only one direction and healthy valves close tightly to stop the blood from flowing backwards. A stethoscope can detect the sound of the heart valves opening and closing. The tricuspid valve is located between the right atrium and the right ventricle and the pulmonary valve on the right ventricle regulates the opening to the pulmonary artery. The mitral valve is situated between the left atrium and the left ventricle, while the aortic valve on the left ventricle controls the opening to the aorta.

Pacemaker

The rate at which the heart beats is controlled by electrical impulses mediated by the involuntary, or autonomic, nervous system. One nerve, coming from the brain, speeds up the heart beat, while another slows it down. The nerves terminate in a group of cells, located in the wall of the right atrium, called the sinus node or pacemaker.

make sure it brainliest please please


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