right atrium
The heart makes a "lub-dub" sound. The first is when the AV valves close and the ventricles are filled. The second is when the semi-lunar vlaves close and the blood is sent to the lungs, or to the rest of the body.
The closing of the mitral and tricuspid valves results in the first heart sound. The closing of the aortic and pulmonic valves results in the second heart sound.AV valve
The sound coming from your heart is the sound of the valves in the heart closing and the turbulence in the blood that results. In a normal healthy adult the first sound (or lub) is from the closing of the AV valve and the second sound (or dub) is from the closing of the semilunar valve.
Most people can hear two heart sounds per cycle - a quiet "lub" and a louder "dub". The "lub" sound is the contraction of the two atria, which results in the ventricles being filled with blood. The "dub" sound is the contraction of the two ventricles, which results in blood being forced into the arterial system. However, a trained physician can hear four sounds - the two described above, and two more that represent the sound of the valves opening back up after the contraction is over.
The sound is caused by the closing of valves in the heart.
after the first heart sound is made ventricles starts emptying.
atria
No. The heart sounds are caused by the closure of heart valves. The first heart sound is caused by the closure of the AV valves (tricuspid and mitral). The second heart sound is the result of the closure of the aortic and pulmonic valve after the completion of systole. Turbulence of blood flow through the aortic valve would cause a murmur (an abnormal heart sound) during systole.
A heartbeat has two parts the first part in the flow of the blood into the heart. The second part is the flow of the blood out of the heart. That is why heart beat is a bub-bub sound.
Normal heart sounds (often called lub-dub) are caused by the pressure changes in the ventricles closing the various heart valves. The first sound, lub, is caused by the closing of the atrioventricular valves after the ventricles have filled with blood and as the ventricles begin to contract. The second sound, dub, is caused by the closing of the semilunar valves as the ventricles relax after pushing blood forward.
The heart has two pumps inside of it and each has two chambers and two valves. The left side of the heart has the biggest chambers, and the one that pumps the blood to your body is called the left ventricle, When it contracts (squeezes together), the first valve closes shut (that's the "lupp" sound of a heart beat) and the contraction pushes the blood up past the second valve and into aorta, which is the main artery that distributes the blood to the regular arteries that carry the blood throughout the body. When the blood goes into the aorta, the second valve shuts so the blood doesn't go backwards into the heart and that is the "dubb" sound of a heart beat.
Yes the "heart beat" is just the sound of the valves opening and closing, not the sound of the blood being pumped.