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heart |
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heartMuscular organ that rhythmically contracts to force blood around the body of an animal with a circulatory system. Annelid worms and some other invertebrates have simple hearts consisting of thickened sections of main blood vessels that pulse regularly. An earthworm has ten such hearts. Vertebrates have one heart. A fish heart has two chambers – the thin-walled atrium (once called the auricle) that expands to receive blood, and the thick-walled ventricle that pumps it out. Amphibians and most reptiles have two atria and one ventricle; birds and mammals have two atria and two ventricles. The beating of the heart is controlled by the autonomic nervous system and an internal control centre or pacemaker, the sinoatrial node. The human heart is more or less conical in shape and is positioned within the chest, behind the breast bone, above the diaphragm, and between the two lungs. It has flattened back and front surfaces and is, in health, the size of a person's closed fist. However, it varies in size with the person's weight, age, sex, and state of health. Its capacity is about 20 cm3 in the newborn, reaching 150–160 cm3 in the mid-teens. The female heart has a smaller capacity and is lighter than the male. Mammals have a double circulatory system (see double circulation). In this kind of system the heart is divided into two halves, each half working as a separate pump. One side of the heart pumps blood to the lungs and back to the heart. The other side of the heart pumps blood to all other parts of the body and back to the heart.
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Meanwhile, the warming does not induce a sharp increase in the blood pressure level and the heart rate so it can keep heart strains low. While this response mechanism comes in handy when faced with life-threatening danger, stress expert Bruce McEwen at The Rockefeller University in New York City says prolonged exposure to stress hormones is full of downsides: heart strain, brain memory-cell damage, and a weakened disease-fighting immune system, to name a few. In a prospective study of 92 children who were admitted for adenotonsillectomy in England, three had evidence of right heart strain in addition to apnea, snoring, and daytime somnolence. |
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