par Bhagya Suresh Il y a 8 mois
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- The heart muscle receives oxygen-rich blood from the coronary arteries. - Deoxygenated bloodis taken in by coronary veins and returned to the right atrium.
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Pericardium: double-walled sac that encloses the heart. The fibrous pericardium is the superficial portion of this sac (tough dense connective tissue layer). The serous pericardium is located deep within the fibrous pericardium (thin double layered membrane). Within the fibrous pericardium, its parietal layer borders the surface. The visceral layer continues across the exterior heart surface, connecting major arteries leaving the heart. Heart Wall: Epicardium (outer layer), myocardium (middle layer), endocardium (inner layer)
Atria: Receiving chambers with thin walls that receive blood from the lungs (left atrium) and body (right atrium). Ventricles: Pumping chambers that are muscular and thick-walled that pump blood from the heart to the body (left ventricle) and the lungs (right ventricle).
- The right atrium of the heart receives deoxygenated blood through the superior and inferior vena cava - The tricuspid valve allows blood to pass into the right ventricle. - Blood is pushed from the right ventricle to the pulmonary valve into the pulmonary artery and ultimately reaching the lungs for oxygenation - Through the pulmonary veins, oxygenated blood is returned to the heart through the left atrium. - The mitral valve allows blood to enter the left ventricle. - Eventually, it is pumped into the aorta via the aortic valve and distributed to the body tissues