| Tricuspid valve | | | | Anterior (frontal) view of the opened heart. White arrows indicate normal blood flow. (Tricuspid valve labeled at bottom left.) | | | | Base of ventricles exposed by removal of the atria. (Tricuspid valve visible at bottom right.) | | Latin | valva atrioventricularis dextra, valvula tricuspidalis | | Gray's | subject #138 531 | | MeSH | Tricuspid+Valve | | Dorlands/Elsevier | v_02/12843894 | The tricuspid valve is on the right side of the heart, between the right atrium and the right ventricle. The normal tricuspid valve usually has three leaflets and three papillary muscles. Tricuspid valves may also occur with two or four leaflets, and the number may change during life (Van Pragh, 1998). Image File history File links Diagram_of_the_human_heart_(cropped). ...
Image File history File links No higher resolution available. ...
For other uses, see Latin (disambiguation). ...
Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) is a huge controlled vocabulary (or metadata system) for the purpose of indexing journal articles and books in the life sciences. ...
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This page is about the muscular organ, the Heart. ...
The right ventricle is one of four chambers (two atria and two ventricles) in the human heart. ...
Papillary muscles: attached to chordae tendineae, their function is to open and close both the bicuspid and the tricuspid valves, which are located between the atrias and their respective ventricles. ...
Valves
- The largest cusp is interposed between the atrioventricular orifice and the conus arteriosus and is termed the anterior or infundibular cusp.
- A second, the posterior or marginal cusp, is in relation to the right margin of the ventricle.
- A third, the medial or septal cusp, to the ventricular septum.
- The tricuspid valve prevents the blood from returning to the right atrium when the right ventricle contracts
jono white (1991) Atrioventricular opening can refer to: Right atrioventricular opening Left atrioventricular opening Category: ...
The upper and left angle of the right ventricle forms a conical pouch, the conus arteriosus, from which the pulmonary artery arises. ...
In the heart, a ventricle is a heart chamber which collects blood from an atrium (another heart chamber that is smaller than a ventricle) and pumps it out of the heart. ...
Interventricular septum: The stout wall separating the lower chambers (the ventricles) of the heart from one another. ...
Pathology A small amount of leakage or regurgitation is not uncommon in the tricuspid valve. It is a common valve to be infected (endocarditis) in IV drug users.[1][2] Although it is not a common site of endocarditis, patients with a small VSD usually develop endocarditis of the tricuspid valve.[citation needed] Regurgitation is blood flow in the opposite direction from normal, as the backward flowing of blood into the heart or between heart chambers. ...
Endocarditis is an inflammation of the inner layer of the heart, the endocardium. ...
An intravenous drug (IV drug) is a drug administered intravenously, either by an intravenous drip or a syringe. ...
The tricuspid valve can be affected by rheumatic fever which can cause tricuspid stenosis or tricuspid insufficiency (also called tricuspid regurgitation). Rheumatic fever is an inflammatory disease which may develop after a Group A streptococcal infection (such as strep throat or scarlet fever) and can involve the heart, joints, skin, and brain. ...
Tricuspid valve stenosis is a narrowing of the orifice of the tricuspid valve of the heart. ...
Tricuspid insufficiency, also termed Tricuspid regurgitation, refers to the failure of the hearts tricuspid valve to close properly during systole. ...
Some patients are born with congenital abnormalities of the tricuspid valve. Congenital apical displacement of the tricuspid valve is called Ebstein's anomaly and typically causes significant tricuspid regurgitation. A congenital disorder is a medical condition or defect that is present at or before birth (for example, congenital heart disease). ...
Ebsteins anomaly is a congenital heart defect in which the opening of the tricuspid valve is displaced towards the apex of the right ventricle of the heart. ...
Regurgitation is blood flow in the opposite direction from normal, as the backward flowing of blood into the heart or between heart chambers. ...
The first endovascular tricuspid valve implant was performed by physicians at the Cleveland Clinic. [3] Cleveland Clinic is a multispecialty academic medical center located in Cleveland, Ohio. ...
References - ^ Demin AA, Drobysheva VP, Vel'ter OIu (2000). "[Infectious endocarditis in intravenous drug abusers]" (in Russian). Klinicheskaia meditsina 78 (8): 47-51. PMID 11019526.
- ^ Butany J, Dev V, Leong SW, Soor GS, Thangaroopan M, Borger MA (2006). "Infective endocarditis of the tricuspid valve". Journal of cardiac surgery 21 (6): 603-4. PMID 17073968.
- ^ http://www.universitycircle.org/content/healthcare.asp
Additional reading - Richard Van Pragh: Cardiac anatomy in A. C. Chang et al.: Pediatric Cardiac Intensive Care, Philadelphia 1998.
See also Grays Fig. ...
Anterior (frontal) view of the opened heart. ...
External links | Anatomy of torso, cardiovascular system: heart | | Structures | atria (interatrial septum, musculi pectinati) • ventricles (interventricular septum, trabeculae carneae, chordae tendinae, papillary muscle) • valves • cusps | | Regions | base • apex • grooves (coronary/atrioventricular, interatrial, anterior interventricula, posterior interventricular) • surfaces (sternocostal, diaphragmatic) • borders (right, left) | | Right heart | (vena cavae, coronary sinus) → right atrium (auricle, fossa ovalis, limbus of fossa ovalis, crista terminalis, valve of the inferior vena cava, valve of the coronary sinus) → tricuspid valve → right ventricle (conus arteriosus, moderator band/septomarginal trabecula) → pulmonary valve → (pulmonary artery and pulmonary circulation) | | Left heart | (pulmonary veins) → left atrium (auricle) → mitral valve → left ventricle → aortic valve (aortic sinus) → (aorta and systemic circulation) | | Layers | pericardium: fibrous pericardium • serous pericardium (pericardial cavity, epicardium/visceral layer) • pericardial sinus myocardium • endocardium • cardiac skeleton (fibrous trigone, fibrous rings) | | Conduction system | Cardiac pacemaker • SA node • AV node• bundle of His • Purkinje fibers | |