A concave/cavernous area of an organ is a ventricle. Like the hollow compartments in the heart.
assuming you mean the heart it is the left ventricle becasue it is the part that pumps blood to the rest of the body
The blood then flows into to the right ventricle, and out into the pulmonary artery through the pulmonic valve.
The value that prevents blood from returning to the right ventricle is the pulmonary valve. It is located between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery and opens to allow blood to flow from the right ventricle to the lungs for oxygenation. It closes to prevent the backflow of blood into the right ventricle during ventricular relaxation.
there is a tricuspid valve in between the right atria and ventricle.
From the right ventricle blood flows to the pulmonary artery then to the lung to get oxygenated then to the pulmonary vein into the left auricle to the left ventricle the to the aorta then to the rest of the body.
Ventricle tachycardia and ventricle fibrilation
The right ventricle has deoxgenated blood in it if that is what you mean by "bad blood". The left ventrical has oxgenated blood in it, or what you mean by "good blood"
you mean left atria to left ventricle? the bicusped/mitral valve
It means the Third Ventricle. (A medical term)
If you mean atrium, it is the right ventricle.
A mildly dilated left ventricle could mean a wide variety of things. You may have an enlarged heart, or you could be on a medication that is causing this.
The intraventricular septum separates the right ventricle from the left ventricle.
right ventricle
right ventricle
It comes from the left ventricle out through the aorta.
Do you mean that the left ventricle's walls are thicker than the right's? It's because one side has to pump blood only to the lungs, while the other side needs to pump blood to the entire body, and needs to be stronger.
It is the ventricle