Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A Wiggers diagram, named after its developer, Carl Wiggers, is a unique diagram that has been used in teaching cardiac physiology for more than a century. [1] [2] In the Wiggers diagram, the X-axis is used to plot time subdivided into the cardiac phases, while the Y-axis typically contains the following on a single grid: Blood pressure. Aortic ...
English: A Wiggers diagram, showing the cardiac cycle events occuring in the left ventricle. In the atrial pressure plot: wave "a" corresponds to atrial contraction, wave "c" corresponds to an increase in pressure from the mitral valve bulging into the atrium after closure, and wave "v" corresponds to passive atrial filling.
Depolarization occurs in the four chambers of the heart: both atria first, and then both ventricles. The sinoatrial (SA) node on the wall of the right atrium initiates depolarization in the right and left atria, causing contraction, which corresponds to the P wave on an electrocardiogram.
Cardiac physiology or heart function is the study of healthy, unimpaired function of the heart: involving blood flow; myocardium structure; the electrical conduction system of the heart; the cardiac cycle and cardiac output and how these interact and depend on one another.
Cardiovascular physiology is the study of the cardiovascular system, specifically addressing the physiology of the heart ("cardio") and blood vessels ("vascular"). These subjects are sometimes addressed separately, under the names cardiac physiology and circulatory physiology .
Medical Physiology/Cardiovascular Physiology; Structural Biochemistry/Cell Signaling Pathways/Circulatory System; Structural Biochemistry/Volume 2; Science: An Elementary Teacher’s Guide/The Human Body: The Circulatory System; The Organ Systems/circulatory; Learning anatomy/Vein; Learning anatomy/Printable version; Usage on en.wikiversity.org
A-level Biology/Transport/mammalian heart; General Anatomy/Cardiovascular System; USMLE Step 1 Review/Cardiovascular; User:M3058565; Biomedical Engineering Theory And Practice/Physiolgocial System; Biomedical Engineering Theory And Practice/Biomechanics IV; The Organ Systems/circulatory; Main Page/sandbox; Usage on en.wikiversity.org Human heart
Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts.