enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Intercalated disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intercalated_disc

    Intercalated discs or lines of Eberth are microscopic identifying features of cardiac muscle. Cardiac muscle consists of individual heart muscle cells (cardiomyocytes) connected by intercalated discs to work as a single functional syncytium. By contrast, skeletal muscle consists of multinucleated muscle fibers and exhibits no intercalated discs ...

  3. Cardiac muscle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_muscle

    Intercalated discs are part of the cardiac muscle cell sarcolemma and they contain gap junctions and desmosomes. The cardiac syncytium is a network of cardiomyocytes connected by intercalated discs that enable the rapid transmission of electrical impulses through the network, enabling the syncytium to act in a coordinated contraction of the ...

  4. Cardiac action potential - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_action_potential

    All cardiac muscle cells are electrically linked to one another, by intercalated discs which allow the action potential to pass from one cell to the next. [1][2] This means that all atrial cells can contract together, and then all ventricular cells. Different shapes of the cardiac action potential in various parts of the heart.

  5. Fascia adherens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fascia_adherens

    Fascia adherens. In anatomy for cardiac muscle, fascia adherens are ribbon-like structures that stabilize non-epithelial tissue. They are similar in function and structure to the zonula adherens or adherens junction of epithelial cells. It is a broad intercellular junction in the transversal sections of an intercalated disc of cardiac muscle ...

  6. Intervertebral disc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intervertebral_disc

    Intervertebral disc. An intervertebral disc (or intervertebral fibrocartilage) lies between adjacent vertebrae in the vertebral column. Each disc forms a fibrocartilaginous joint (a symphysis), to allow slight movement of the vertebrae, to act as a ligament to hold the vertebrae together, and to function as a shock absorber for the spine.

  7. Cardiac conduction system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardiac_conduction_system

    The cardiac conduction system (CCS, also called the electrical conduction system of the heart) [1] transmits the signals generated by the sinoatrial node – the heart 's pacemaker, to cause the heart muscle to contract, and pump blood through the body's circulatory system. The pacemaking signal travels through the right atrium to the ...

  8. DSC2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DSC2

    DSC2. Desmocollin-2 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the DSC2 gene. [5][6] Desmocollin-2 is a cadherin -type protein that functions to link adjacent cells together in specialized regions known as desmosomes. Desmocollin-2 is widely expressed, and is the only desmocollin isoform expressed in cardiac muscle, where it localizes to ...

  9. Cadherin-2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cadherin-2

    In cardiac muscle, Cadherin-2 is an integral component in adherens junctions residing at intercalated discs, which function to mechanically and electrically couple adjacent cardiomyocytes. Alterations in expression and integrity of Cadherin-2 has been observed in various forms of disease, including human dilated cardiomyopathy.