Internal Features of Heart Flashcards
key features of right atrium
three venous openings
smooth area including fossa ovalis
rough area including pectinate muscles
with crista and sulcus terminalis to seperate the areas
key features of right ventricle
tricuspid valve (anterior, septal and posterior cusp)
chordae tendinae (papillary muscles)
conus arteriosus
septal papillary muscle
septomarginal trabecula
trabecular carnae
features of left atrium
4 openings for pulmonary veins
fossa ovalis
smooth and rough walls
features of left ventrical
mitral valve anterior/posterior cusp
chordae tendinaea
anterior/posterior papillary muscles
valve names and features
tricuspid- anterior, posterior and septal cusps each has associated papillary muscle
pulmonary- apex of conus arteriosus, left, right and anterior cusps
biscuspid- anterior and posterior cusps each has associated papillary muscle
aortic valve- right, left and posterior cusps. assossiated sinuses allow blood to collect in left and right conorary arteries
left and right side of heart comparison
less muscularity on right than right
right has crescentric shape left has semilunar shape
fetal vs adult circulation
in fetus oxygenated blood enters via umbilical vein
then the blood joins systemic circulation via liver or ductus venosus.
most blood avoid right ventricle via foramen ovale between left and right atria
small amounts of blood in right ventricle end up in the aorta via pulmonary artery and ductus aneriosus
atrial septum defect
foramen ovale fails to close at birth
1-2/1000 births
more common in males
tachycardia, murmur, hepatomegaly
may naturally close or may need surgery
patent ductus arteriosus
ductus arteriosus to close
2/1000 births
asymptomatic
may lead to pulmonary hypertension or right side heart failure