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Glossary

Starting with A for "ACE inhibitor" and continuing through to Y for "Yolk Sac Tumour", we give you succinct explanations for scientific and medical terms in clear and simple words.




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Heart
Muscular hollow organ which has the task of keeping the blood stream in motion in the blood vessels, which it does by alternating contraction (systole) and relaxation (diastole) of the atria and chambers (ventricles) (cf. circulation of the blood). The heart is enclosed in the pericardium on the diaphragm and between the lungs. A partition, the septum, divides the heart into left and right halves. Each half is then split into an upper and weaker section, known as the atrium, and a stronger and lower section known as the ventricle. The left ventricle is stronger than the right.

The heart wall consists of three layers; internal wall (endocardium), intermediate layer (myocardium) and external wall (pericardium).

The caval veins (vena cava superior and vena cava inferior) carry low oxygen blood from the body into the right atrium. The pulmonary veins (venae pulmonales) carry oxygen rich blood from the lungs into the left atrium. The trunk of the pulmonary arteries (truncus pulmonalis) leaves the right side of the right ventricle and transports low oxygen blood into the lungs. The large artery, the aorta, transports oxygen rich blood from the left ventricle to the rest of the body.

The heart has four valves, which are attached to the skeleton of the heart. The leaflet valves can seal the passage between the atria and ventricles. The semilunar valves lie at the start of the truncus pulmonalis and the aorta and hinder the reflux of blood into the ventricles during diastole.

Glossary entries:  Roche and Walter de Gruyter, Berlin