Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction to the Second Edition
- Part I Background mechanics
- Part II Mechanics of the circulation
- 10 Blood
- 11 The heart
- 12 The systemic arteries
- 13 The systemic microcirculation
- 14 The systemic veins
- 15 The pulmonary circulation
- Index
- Table I
11 - The heart
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction to the Second Edition
- Part I Background mechanics
- Part II Mechanics of the circulation
- 10 Blood
- 11 The heart
- 12 The systemic arteries
- 13 The systemic microcirculation
- 14 The systemic veins
- 15 The pulmonary circulation
- Index
- Table I
Summary
The mammalian heart consists of two pumps, connected to each other in series, so that the output from each is eventually applied as the input to the other. Since they are developed, embryologically, by differentiation of a single structure, it is not surprising that the pumps are intimately connected anatomically, and that they share a number of features. These include a single excitation mechanism, so that they act almost synchronously; a unique type of muscle, cardiac muscle, which has an anatomical structure similar to skeletal muscle, but some important functional differences; and a similar arrangement of chambers and one-way valves. Not surprisingly, the assumption has often been made that the function of the two pumps will also be similar. Thus it has become common practice to examine the properties of one pump, usually the left, and to assume that the results apply to the other also. This may often be unjustified, particularly in studies of cardiac mechanics, with the result that our knowledge of the mechanics of the right heart and the pulmonary circulation remains very incomplete. It must also be remembered that the scope for experiments on the human heart is very limited, and we must rely heavily on experimental information from animal studies. Thus the descriptions which follow apply primarily to the dog heart.
Many factors which affect the performance of the heart are not our concern in this chapter, among the most important being the wide range of reflexes which act on the heart. For example, nerve endings in the aortic wall and carotid sinus are sensitive to stretch, and thus to changes in arterial pressure.
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- Chapter
- Information
- The Mechanics of the Circulation , pp. 178 - 237Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011