Show:
Questions
Responses
Print
Heart Tissue
Atriums&Ventricleses
Valves
Blood Types
Blood Vessels
100
Muscular middle layer of heart tissue
What is myocardium
100
Valve that ensures one-way blood flow between atria and ventricles
What is Atrioventricular valve (A-V Valve)
100
Allows blood flow between the left atrium and the left ventricle
What is bicuspid valve
100
Has only "A" antigens
What is type "A" blood
100
Carries blood toward the heart
What is a vein
200
Encloses heart and proximal ends of large blood vessels to which it attaches
What is Pericardium
200
Solid, wall-like structure that separates the atrium and ventricle on the left from those on the right
What is septum
200
Allows blood flow between the right atrium and the right ventricle
What is tricuspid valve
200
Has only "A" antibodies
What is type "B" blood
200
Carries blood away from the heart
What is an artery
300
The two types of inner pericardium
What is parietal and visceral
300
Projections extending out from the atria
What are auricles
300
Opens when the left ventricle contracts; at the base of the aorta
What is aortic valve
300
Universal Donor
What is type "O" blood
300
Fine branches of the arteries
What are arterioles
400
Contains purkinje fibers; inner layer of heart tissue
What is endocardium
400
Another name for the S-A node
What is pacemaker
400
Allows blood to leave the right ventricle; at the base of the pulmonary trunk
What is pulmonary valve
400
Contains no antibodies
What is type "AB" blood
400
Smallest diameter blood vessel
What is capillary
500
Serous membrane that corresponds with visceral pericardium
What is endocardium
500
Group of large fibers in the A-V node
What is A-V bundle/Bundle of His
500
The two atrioventricular valves
What are the bicuspid and tricuspid valves
500
Universal recipients
What is type "AB" blood
500
Lowest pressure remaining in arteries before the next ventricular contraction
What is diastolic pressure