A ventricle is a cavity in an organ. It usually refers to the two lower cavities in the heart, that pump blood into the body and the lungs. It is also used in connection to the series of chambers inside the brain, which are filled with cerebrospinal fluid.
In the heart, the left ventricle below the left atrium, and the right ventricle under the right atrium
The septum is located between the left and right ventricles.
Left & right lateral ventricles
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VSD stands for ventricular septal defect. So a VSD is located in the septum (wall) between the two ventricles.
the difference between the ventricles and the atria is that the ventricles are thicker
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The septum is located between the left and right ventricles.
Each cerebral hemisphere
The atrioventricular valves are located between the atria and the ventricles. The semilunar valves are located between the ventricles and the arteries leaving the heart.
The function of the septum pellucidum is to cover and seperate the lateral ventricles. And by covering these ventricles it can also help keeping in the cerebrospinal fluid produced by the choroid plexus within those ventricles.
The Bundle of His (Hiss) is a bundle of electrical nodes which allow the ventricles to contract. The bundle is located in the ventricular septum which divides the two ventricles and separates into the Perkinje fibers at the apex of the heart. It is located in the myocardium.
Left & right lateral ventricles
The ventricles of the heart are most commonly known; there are ventricles in the brain, however.
The heart has 4 different chambers: 2 atrium and 2 ventricles. There are right and left atriums and ventricles. Look down below for where they are located.
Atria is the receiving chamber and it is located at the top while ventricles are the one responsible for pumping blood out of the heart either to oxygenate the blood or to deliver it into our systems and it is located at the bottom part of the heart
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There are actually two. The aortic and pulmonary semi-lunar valves are located at the exit of their corresponding ventricles (of the heart) and open to allow blood to exit the heart