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  2. Atrioventricular septum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atrioventricular_septum

    The atrioventricular septum is a septum of the heart between the right atrium (RA) and the left ventricle (LV). [1] [2]Although the name "atrioventricular septum" implies any septum between an atrium and a ventricle, in practice the divisions from RA to RV and from LA to LV are mediated by valves, not by septa.

  3. Ventricle (heart) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventricle_(heart)

    Heart section showing ventricles and ventricular septum. Ventricles have thicker walls than atria and generate higher blood pressures.The physiological load on the ventricles requiring pumping of blood throughout the body and lungs is much greater than the pressure generated by the atria to fill the ventricles.

  4. Cardiac skeleton - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_skeleton

    The physiologic cardiac skeleton forms a firewall governing autonomic/electrical influence until bordering the bundle of His which further governs autonomic flow to the bundle branches of the ventricles. Understood as such, the cardiac skeleton efficiently centers and robustly funnels electrical energy from the atria to the ventricles.

  5. Heart - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heart

    The valves between the atria and ventricles are called the atrioventricular valves. Between the right atrium and the right ventricle is the tricuspid valve. The tricuspid valve has three cusps, [22] which connect to chordae tendinae and three papillary muscles named the anterior, posterior, and septal muscles, after their relative positions ...

  6. Ventricular system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ventricular_system

    The ventricles contained within the rhombencephalon become the fourth ventricle, and the ventricles contained within the mesencephalon become the aqueduct of Sylvius. Separating the anterior horns of the lateral ventricles is the septum pellucidum : a thin, triangular, vertical membrane which runs as a sheet from the corpus callosum down to the ...

  7. Aorticopulmonary septum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aorticopulmonary_septum

    The septum grows down into the ventricle as an oblique partition, which ultimately blends with the ventricular septum in such a way as to bring the bulbus cordis into communication with the pulmonary artery, and through the latter with the sixth pair of aortic arches; while the left ventricle is brought into continuity with the aorta, which ...

  8. Wikipedia:Osmosis/Ventricular septal defect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Osmosis/...

    If you look at the heart, you’ve got your right and left atrium up top, and right and left ventricles down low. Each of these pairs is separated by a wall, called a septum. A ventricular septal defect is when this lower wall—the ventricular septum—has a gap in it after development.

  9. Circulatory system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circulatory_system

    [citation needed] Galen believed that the arterial blood was created by venous blood passing from the left ventricle to the right by passing through 'pores' in the interventricular septum, air passed from the lungs via the pulmonary artery to the left side of the heart. As the arterial blood was created 'sooty' vapors were created and passed to ...