Well the heart is based on 4 chambers you have 2 upper ventricals and 2 lower ventricles the ventricles each have 2 little doors that open and close. the top right ventricle will suck in the blood and the bottom 2 will transfer it to the left top ventricle which than pushes the blood out into the blood stream again in average healty heart will beat 70-75 beats per minute. Children have a higher rate in the 80's and 90's, depending on their age. The younger they are the faster the heart rate.
The left side of the heart has thicker muscle walls because it pumps blood through almost the whole body. The right side of the heart only pumps blood to the lungs, and so requires less force, and thinner walls.
The right side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs, the left side pumps blood to the rest of the body.
there are 4 part to a heart left atrium, left ventricle, right atrium, right ventricle
right ventricle Ventricles, left and right
On the left it's blue and on the right it's red, but the heart curves in a way where it's on both sides.
No, the deoxygenated blood enters and leaves the heart through the right side and the oxygenated blood enters and leaves the heart through the left side. Both sides of the heart are separated by a wall called a septum. The wall between the left and right atria is the interatrial septum and the wall between the left and right ventricles is the interventricular septum.
A test that can be performed on either side of the heart, cardiac catheterization checks for different functions in both the left and right sides.
A heart has 2 sides. Left side, right side.
the left side of heart is thick walled.
Right to left shunt
the left and right atria and the left and right ventricles
there are 4 part to a heart left atrium, left ventricle, right atrium, right ventricle
The heart is divided into right and left sides by the a Cuckaroo Suture. Nothing more.
The section of the heart that divides the left and right side of the heart is called the interventricular septum.
The septum divides the left and right sides of the heart.
The top parts are called atriums and below them are the ventricles. The left & right sides of the heart must be examined at your own perspective (left = right, right = left).
the septum
septal tissue
The AV valve. There is one for the right and left sides of the heart.