The apex of the heart is comprised mainly of the right ventricle
Question
The apex of the heart is comprised mainly of the right ventricle
Solution
Actually, the statement is incorrect. The apex of the heart is comprised mainly of the left ventricle, not the right. The left ventricle is responsible for pumping oxygenated blood to the rest of the body, and its location and shape form the pointed apex at the bottom of the heart.
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Chambers of the heart RIGHT ATRIUM • general features: thin-walled chamber that lies superior to the right ventricle; receives blood from the systemic blood circuit; • orifice of the superior vena cava: located in the superior region of the right atrium; • orifice of the inferior vena cava: located in the inferior region of the right atrium; backflow of blood is prevented by the presence of the Eustachian valve; • auricle of the right atrium: ear-shaped pouch/extension of the right atrium; projects to the left from the root of the superior vena cava; • pectinate muscles: also called musculi pectinati; parallel muscular ridges on the internal wall of the majority of the right atrium and the right auricle; • interatrial septum: partition between the ___________________________ and the ________________________________; • fossa ovalis: shallow depression in the interatrial septum; remnant of the foetal _________________________________; • coronary sinus opening: located internally in the wall of the right atrium; lies between the orifice of the inferior vena cava and the right atrioventricular opening; receives all blood draining from the heart itself; protected by a semilunar fold of the endothelium of the heart called the coronary valve
RIGHT VENTRICLE • general features: wall thickness is less than that of the left ventricle; receives blood from the right atrium via the right atrioventricular orifice; • trabeculae carneae: criss-crossing muscular ridges on the internal walls of the ventricle; composed of myocardium; • right atrioventricular valve: also known as the _______________________ valve; consists of three triangular-shaped flaps called cusps; consists of dense connective tissue covered by endothelium; • papillary muscles of the right ventricle: internal cone-shaped projections of the myocardium; each attaches to a separate cusp of the tricuspid valve via the chordae tendineae; • chordae tendineae of the right ventricle: fibrous cords that attach the cusps of the tricuspid valve to the papillary muscles; function to maintain closed state of right atrioventricular valve; • interventricular septum: thick muscular partition that separates the ___________________________ from the __________________________; • pulmonary trunk: carries all blood from the right ventricle into the pulmonary circuit where the blood receives oxygen from the lungs (become oxygenated); • pulmonary semilunar valve: found in the origin of the pulmonary trunk; consists of three cusps; made up of dense connective tissue covered by endothelium; functions to prevent backflow of blood.
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