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  1. Aug 26, 2013 · The pericardial layers and layers of the heart wall. The third layer of the heart wall is called the endocardium. It is a white sheet of endothelium (squamous epithelium) resting on a connective tissue layer. It is located on the inner myocardial surface and lines the heart chambers.

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      Glandular Epithelium. A gland is one or more cells that...

    • Atherosclerosis

      The American Heart Association recommended that people with...

    • Skeletal

      Skeletal - Heart Anatomy: size, location, coverings and...

    • Integumentary

      Loss of homeostasis within body cells and organs always...

    • Blood

      Blood - Heart Anatomy: size, location, coverings and layers

    • Reproductive

      Reproductive - Heart Anatomy: size, location, coverings and...

  2. Muscular ridges in the anterior atrial wall and inner surface of the auricle. Muscular ridges in the internal surface of the ventricle. Thin-walled chambers of the heart that receive venous blood. External visible flaps that form by the collapse of the outer wall of a relaxed atrium.

  3. Apr 20, 2023 · In the anatomical position, the heart has five surfaces – each formed by the different chambers of the heart: Anterior (or sternocostal) – Right ventricle. Posterior (base of the pyramid) – Left atrium.

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  4. Mar 2, 2024 · The endocardium is the innermost lining layer of the heart, which covers the internal surfaces of the heart chambers and valves. It is one of the three main layers of the heart wall, the other two being the myocardium (the muscular middle layer) and the epicardium (the outer layer).

  5. Inside the pericardium, the surface features of the heart are visible, including the four chambers. There is a superficial leaf-like extension of each atrium near the superior surface of the heart, one on each side of the pulmonary trunk, called an auricle—a name that means “ear like”—because its shape resembles the external ear of a ...

  6. Jan 16, 2024 · The heart is divided into 4 chambers: 2 upper chambers for receiving blood from the great vessels, known as the right and left atria, and 2 stronger lower chambers, known as the right and left ventricles, which pump blood throughout the body.

  7. The limbs of the U are separated by a muscular ridge termed the supraventricular crest. The upper limb, or conus arteriosus (or infundibulum), is the arterial, or outflowing, part of the ventricle, and it ends in the pulmonary trunk. The walls of the conus are usually smooth.

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