left because it pumps more blood
Myocardial Ischemia
The name of this thicker layer is the cell wall and the functions is to protect the core cells .o forget it
It is indicative of the degree of vibration set up in the aorta by the ventricular contraction during rapid ejection phase of cardiac cycle.
apex
Ventricular fibrillation is an immediate life threat, so it is more serious.
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. =]
Ventricular hypertrophy means a thickening of the ventricle walls. This can then be described as eccentric or concentric. Eccentric hypertrophy is where the wall thickens but the ventricle itself dilates therefore the wall is thickened but the ventricular chamber remains the same size. Concentric hypertrophy is where the wall thickens which then makes the internal ventricular chamber smaller.
I answered this question last week... but anyway... the aorta has to accommodate much higher pressures from the left ventricle, ergo it is thicker.
you are mistaken...the ventricular walls are thicker than the auricular walls.. The left ventricle is further thicker than the right ventricle. This is because the left ventricle has to transport blood to all the parts of the body and has to travel a long distance hence requires it to be transported at great pressure. As a result the wall is thicker. The auricles only have to pump blood into the ventricles underneath them and therefore don't require alot of pressure hence are not thick. The right ventricle however pumps the deoxygenated blood into the lungs and has to travel a relatively short distance since the lungs are close to the heart hence not alot of pressure is required either. All this explains why the Ventricular walls are generally thicker than the auricular walls.
Myocardial Ischemia
cause it is !! :)
because it is pumping against more resistance. it has to be stronger to get blood to the entire body. the RIGHT ventricle only has to pump blood to the lungs.
artries
The short Answer: The ventricles have thicker walls than the atrium simply because this is the part of the heart that does most of the pumping action by contracting. It has to be strong and fairly thick to cope with the pressure. (Ventricles have thicker walls than the atrium, which creates a higher blood pressure. The left ventricle has thicker walls because it needs to pump blood to the whole body. The wall of the left ventricle is 8-15 mm The right atrium's wall is approximately 2mm in thickness, due to the combined influence of the low pressure of this chamber and the ease of pumping to low pressure areas)
Heart rate and ventricular wall tension
the wall of an artery is usuallythicker that the wall of a vein.
That portion of the heart wall that divides the right and left ventricles