the septum
The intraventricular septum separates the right ventricle from the left ventricle.
The Left Ventricle has to send blood all through the body. This requires more force, therefore more muscle.
The septum, or septal wall as it is often referred to, is what separates the left and right ventricles.
The Left Ventricle has to send blood all through the body. This requires more force, therefore more muscle.
The right ventricle has a less muscular wall than the left ventricle because it pumps blood to the lungs, which are located nearby, requiring less force. In contrast, the left ventricle must generate much higher pressure to pump blood throughout the entire body, necessitating a thicker, more muscular wall. This structural difference reflects the distinct functions and pressure requirements of each ventricle.
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 just receive the blood and pump it into the lungs only, but the left ventricle pump the blood to all round the body, to do the ventricle wall is more thicker, that's why the left ventricle have thicker wall..... Hope I helped you!! (Ivy Yumi Y)
the diaphragm
in my school my teacher asked us to do a project and my question is : WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A RIGHT VENTRICLE AND THE LEFT VENTRICLE ? The wall of the left ventricle is a lot thicker than the wall of the right ventricle. This is because a lot more pressure is required to pump blood from the heart to the farthest body tissues. The right pulmonary pump only needs to pump blood as far as the adjacent lungs.
How is a stimulus carried through the wall of a ventricle?
The thicker walls of the left ventricle allow for greater pumping force. This increased force is needed because blood in the systemic circuit must travel much farther than that in the pulmonary circuit.