the right ventricle contains deoxegynated blood, but the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood out at a much more forceful rate (it has to get to the rest of you body). Therefore, the left ventricle wall is thicker. =]
the right ventricle contains deoxegynated blood, but the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood out at a much more forceful rate (it has to get to the rest of you body). Therefore, the left ventricle wall is thicker. =]
the right ventricle contains deoxegynated blood, but the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood out at a much more forceful rate (it has to get to the rest of you body). Therefore, the left ventricle wall is thicker. =]
left because it pumps more blood
Finished wall thickness X 20 = wall height
wall thickness of pipe is (OD - ID) /2
Ventricular hypertrophy means a thickening of the ventricle walls. This can then be described as eccentric or concentric. Eccentric hypertrophy is where the wall thickens but the ventricle itself dilates therefore the wall is thickened but the ventricular chamber remains the same size. Concentric hypertrophy is where the wall thickens which then makes the internal ventricular chamber smaller.
I answered this question last week... but anyway... the aorta has to accommodate much higher pressures from the left ventricle, ergo it is thicker.
=3.14 * (Diameter of pipe in Mtr. - wall thickness in Mtr. ) * Wall Thickness in Mtr. * 7850
The maximum thickness of a reinforced concrete wall is 203 mm.
technically nominal wall thickness refers to pipe wall thickness (average)..if you are referring to shell/hull/fore part of a vessel, the thickness varies depending of type, size, deadweight of the vessel
the wall thickness of sch 40 - 500mm dia pipe is 15mm or 16mm.
It could be 65" (b wall - 5.5" wall thickness), or 66.5" (c wall - 6.25" wall thickness).
Can you calculate the ID of a pipe when you have the OD to be 10.75" and the wall thickness to be 0.5"Depends on what you know about it. If you have the outer diameter and you know the wall thickness, then ID = OD-2 x wall thickness
Myocardial Ischemia