HEART, ANATOMY


Model of the intern anatomy of the heart of an adult human body (anterior view of a frontal section). The heart contains four cavities: two atriums in its upper part, and two ventricles in its lower part. Both ventricles are separated by a thick muscle wall, the interventricular septum. The superior vena cava (in royal blue, in the background) brings the deoxygenated blood to the right atrium. This dark blood goes through the right ventricle and is then propeled to the lungs via the pulmonary trunk (in royal blue, in the foreground). The blood oxygenated by lungs is next sent back to the left half of the heart and then to the whole body through the arch of aorta (in red). The tricuspid (on the right) and mitral (on the left) valves (in white) prevent the blood in the ventricles from flowing back into the atriums. These valves are bound to the papillary muscles, protusions lying at each ventricle basis, through tendinous ropes: the chordae tendinae. The pulmonary valve (in white), located inside the pulmonary trunk, allows the ejection of the dark blood out of the heart.


Size: 2365px × 3630px
Photo credit: © GOUNOT/3B SCIENTIFIC / BSIP / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: anatomical, anatomy, apparatus, apparatuses, atria, atrial, atrioventricular, atrium, bicuspid, cardiac, cardio, cardio-vascular, cardiovascular, chordae, cord, endocardia, endocardium, heart, hearts, inter-ventricular, interventricular, left, lining, mitral, mitralis, muscle, muscles, myocardia, myocardial, myocardium, papillary, pericardia, pericardial, pericardic, pericardium, pericardiums, septa, septum, septums, system, systems, tendinae, tendineae, tendinous, valve, valves, valvula, vasculature, wall, walls