I have my heart on right side.
all of it.
Why not left y right give me answer plsssss🙏🙏
the walls in the heart much muscular on one side (on left side) because the left ventricle have to pump the blood to whole body.
The left side of the heart is the ventral surface on a sheep's heart. Look for the ventral grooves to identify it.
no, not so much. The heart is nestled in the left lung, however there is plenty of room to remove the heart without removing the lungs.
pretty much through the whole body!
how does the blood circulate Put simply the heart is a pump, I don't know much more about it than that.
It means enlargement of the left ventricle of the heart. This is due to excess work done by the heart as in high blood pressure, damage to the heart muscle after heart attack, valvular disease, respiratory disease putting extra strain to the heart.
you did answer thank so much now ino why we have tonsils
It's closest to the heart, the reading is better. That's partially why heart attack victims feel pain in the left arm.
The four chambers of the heart are as follows:Left atriumRight atriumLeft ventricleRight ventricleThe blood travels from the body into the right atrium and is pumped through the right ventricle to the lungs. Here it exchanges gases and returns to the heart. It enters the left side of the heart and is pumped around the body. The left side of the heart has much further to pump the blood and is therefore larger and more muscular.Right Atrium, Left Atrium, Right Ventricle, Left VentricleRight Atrium, Left Atrium, Right Ventricle, Left VentricleThe heart has four chambers. The two ventricles (right and left) are muscular chambers that propel the blood out of the heart (the right ventricle to the lungs, and the left ventricle to all other organs). The two atria (right and left) hold the blood returning to the heart, and at just the right moment empty into the right and left ventricles.
The ejection fraction is a measure of how much blood the heart can pump. The left ejection fraction is how much blood the heart can pump out into the body (as opposed to into the lungs.) 40-50% is a below-normal ejection fraction.
Pretty much as square cut into quarters, there is a left and right atrium that sit directly above the left and right ventricles.
Yes. This is a congenital condition called situs inversus (or situs transversus). In this condition, "everything works" but the visceral organs are all located "mirror image" to what is "normal" in people. Need a link? You got it.