Your heart is a muscular organ that acts like a pump
to continuously send blood throughout your body.
Your heart is at the center of your circulatory
system. This system consists of a network of blood vessels, such as arteries,
veins, and capillaries. These blood vessels carry blood to and from all areas
of your body.
An electrical system regulates your heart and uses
electrical signals to contract the heart's walls. When the walls contract,
blood is pumped into your circulatory system. A system of inlet and outlet
valves in your heart chambers work to ensure that blood flows in the right
direction.
Your heart is vital to your health and nearly
everything that goes on in your body. Without the heart's pumping action, blood
can't circulate within your body.
Your blood carries the oxygen and nutrients that
your organs need to work normally. Blood also carries carbon dioxide, a waste
product, to your lungs to be passed out of your body and into the air.
A healthy heart supplies the areas of your body with
the right amount of blood at the rate needed to work normally. If disease or
injury weakens your heart, your body's organs won't receive enough blood to
work normally.
Anatomy of the Heart
Your heart is located under the ribcage in the
center of your chest between your right and left lungs. Its muscular walls
beat, or contract, pumping blood continuously to all parts of your body.
The size of your heart can vary depending on your
age, size, and the condition of your heart. A normal, healthy, adult heart most
often is the size of an average clenched adult fist. Some diseases of the heart
can cause it to become larger.
The Exterior of the Heart
Below is a picture of the outside of a normal,
healthy, human heart.
Heart Exterior
The illustration shows the front
surface of a heart, including the coronary arteries and major blood
vessels.
The heart is the muscle in the lower half of the
picture. The heart has four chambers. The right and left atria (AY-tree-uh) are
shown in purple. The right and left ventricles (VEN-trih-kuls) are shown in
red.
Some of the main blood vesselsarteries and
veinsthat make up your blood circulatory system are directly connected to
the heart.
The ventricle on the right side of your heart pumps
blood from your heart to your lungs. When you breathe air in, oxygen passes
from your lungs through your blood vessels and into your blood. Carbon dioxide,
a waste product, is passed from your blood through blood vessels to your lungs
and is removed from your body when you breathe out.
The left atrium receives oxygen-rich blood from your
lungs. The pumping action of your left ventricle sends this oxygen-rich blood
through the aorta (a main artery) to the rest of your body.
The Right Side of Your Heart
The superior and inferior vena cavae are in blue to
the left of the heart muscle as you look at the picture. These veins are the
largest veins in your body.
After your body's organs and tissues have used the
oxygen in your blood, the vena cavae carry the oxygen-poor blood back to the
right atrium of your heart.
The superior vena cava carries oxygen-poor blood
from the upper parts of your body, including your head, chest, arms, and neck.
The inferior vena cava carries oxygen-poor blood from the lower parts of your
body.
The oxygen-poor blood from the vena cavae flows into
your heart's right atrium and then on to the right ventricle. From the right
ventricle, the blood is pumped through the pulmonary (PULL-mun-ary) arteries
(in blue in the center of the picture) to your lungs. There, through many
small, thin blood vessels called capillaries, the blood picks up more
oxygen.
The oxygen-rich blood passes from your lungs back to
your heart through the pulmonary veins (in red to the left of the right atrium
in the picture).
The Left Side of Your Heart
Oxygen-rich blood from your lungs passes through the
pulmonary veins (in red to the right of the left atrium in the picture). It
enters the left atrium and is pumped into the left ventricle. From the left
ventricle, the oxygen-rich blood is pumped to the rest of your body through the
aorta.
Like all of your organs, your heart needs blood rich
with oxygen. This oxygen is supplied through the coronary arteries as blood is
pumped out of your heart's left ventricle.
Your coronary arteries are located on your heart's
surface at the beginning of the aorta. Your coronary arteries (shown in red in
the drawing) carry oxygen-rich blood to all parts of your heart.
The Interior of the Heart
Below is a picture of the inside of a normal,
healthy, human heart.
Heart Interior
The illustration shows a
cross-section of a healthy heart and its inside structures. The blue arrow
shows the direction in which oxygen-poor blood flows from the body to the
lungs. The red arrow shows the direction in which oxygen-rich blood flows from
the lungs to the rest of the body.
The Septum
The right and left sides of your heart are divided
by an internal wall of tissue called the septum. The area of the septum that
divides the atria (the two upper chambers of your heart) is called the atrial
or interatrial septum.
The area of the septum that divides the ventricles
(the two lower chambers of your heart) is called the ventricular or
interventricular septum.
Heart Chambers
The picture shows the inside of your heart and how
it's divided into four chambers. The two upper chambers of your heart are
called atria. The atria receive and collect blood.
The two lower chambers of your heart are called
ventricles. The ventricles pump blood out of your heart into the circulatory
system to other parts of your body.
Heart Valves
The picture shows your heart's four valves. Shown
counterclockwise in the picture, the valves include the aortic (ay-OR-tik)
valve, the tricuspid (tri-CUSS-pid) valve, the pulmonary valve, and the mitral
(MI-trul) valve.
Blood Flow
The arrows in the drawing show the direction that
blood flows through your heart. The light blue arrows show that blood enters
the right atrium of your heart from the superior and inferior vena cavae.
From the right atrium, blood is pumped into the
right ventricle. From the right ventricle, blood is pumped to your lungs
through the pulmonary arteries.
The light red arrows show the oxygen-rich blood
coming in from your lungs through the pulmonary veins into your heart's left
atrium. From the left atrium, the blood is pumped into the left ventricle. The
left ventricle pumps the blood to the rest of your body through the aorta.
For the heart to work properly, your blood must flow
in only one direction. Your heart's valves make this possible. Both of your
heart's ventricles have an "in" (inlet) valve from the atria and an "out"
(outlet) valve leading to your arteries.
Healthy valves open and close in very exact
coordination with the pumping action of your heart's atria and ventricles. Each
valve has a set of flaps called leaflets or cusps that seal or open the valves.
This allows pumped blood to pass through the chambers and into your arteries
without backing up or flowing backward.
Heart Contraction and Blood Flow
The animation below shows how your heart pumps
blood. Click the "start" button to play the animation. Written and spoken
explanations are provided with each frame. Use the buttons in the lower right
corner to pause, restart, or replay the animation, or use the scroll bar below
the buttons to move through the frames.
The animation shows how blood flows
through the heart as it contracts and relaxes.
Heartbeat
Almost everyone has heard the real or recorded sound
of a heartbeat. When your heart beats, it makes a "lub-DUB" sound. Between the
time you hear "lub" and "DUB," blood is pumped through your heart and
circulatory system.
A heartbeat may seem like a simple, repeated event,
but it's a complex series of very precise and coordinated events that take
place inside and around your heart.
Each side of your heart uses an inlet valve to help
move blood between the atrium and ventricle. The tricuspid valve does this
between the right atrium and ventricle. The mitral valve does this between the
left atrium and ventricle. The "lub" is the sound of the tricuspid and mitral
valves closing.
Each of your heart's ventricles has an outlet valve.
The right ventricle uses the pulmonary valve to help move blood into the
pulmonary arteries. The left ventricle uses the aortic valve to do the same for
the aorta. The "DUB" is the sound of the aortic and pulmonary valves
closing.
Each heartbeat has two basic parts: diastole
(di-AS-toe-lee), or relaxation, and atrial and ventricular systole
(SIS-toe-lee), or contraction.
During diastole, the atria and ventricles of your
heart relax and begin to fill with blood. At the end of diastole, your heart's
atria contract (atrial systole) and pump blood into the ventricles. The atria
then begin to relax. Next, your heart's ventricles contract (ventricular
systole) and pump blood out of your heart.
Pumping Action
Your heart uses its four valves to ensure your blood
flows only in one direction. Healthy valves open and close in coordination with
the pumping action of your heart's atria and ventricles.
Each valve has a set of flaps called leaflets or
cusps. These seal or open the valves. This allows pumped blood to pass through
the chambers and into your blood vessels without backing up or flowing
backward.
Oxygen-poor blood from the vena cavae fills your
heart's right atrium. The atrium contracts (atrial systole). The tricuspid
valve located between the right atrium and ventricle opens for a short time and
then shuts. This allows blood to enter into the right ventricle without flowing
back into the right atrium.
When your heart's right ventricle fills with blood,
it contracts (ventricular systole). The pulmonary valve located between your
right ventricle and pulmonary artery opens and closes quickly.
This allows blood to enter into your pulmonary
arteries without flowing back into the right ventricle. This is important
because the right ventricle begins to refill with more blood through the
tricuspid valve. Blood travels through the pulmonary arteries to your lungs to
pick up oxygen.
Oxygen-rich blood returns from the lungs to your
heart's left atrium through the pulmonary veins. As your heart's left atrium
fills with blood, it contracts. This event also is called atrial systole.
The mitral valve located between the left atrium and
left ventricle opens and closes quickly. This allows blood to pass from the
left atrium into the left ventricle without flowing backward.
As the left ventricle fills with blood, it
contracts. This event also is called ventricular systole. The aortic valve
located between the left ventricle and aorta opens and closes quickly. This
allows blood to flow into the aorta. The aorta is the main artery that carries
blood from your heart to the rest of your body.
The aortic valve closes quickly to prevent blood
from flowing back into the left ventricle, which is already filling up with new
blood.
Taking Your Pulse
When your heart pumps blood through your arteries,
it creates a pulse that you can feel on the arteries close to the skin's
surface. For example, you can feel the pulse on the artery inside of your
wrist, below your thumb.
You can count how many times your heart beats by
taking your pulse. You will need a watch with a second hand.
To find your pulse, gently place your index and
middle fingers on the artery located on the inner wrist of either arm, below
your thumb. You should feel a pulsing or tapping against your fingers.
Watch the second hand and count the number of pulses
you feel in 30 seconds. Double that number to find out your heart rate or pulse
for 1 minute.
The usual resting pulse for an adult is 60 to 100
beats per minute. To find your resting pulse, count your pulse after you have
been sitting or resting quietly for at least 10 minutes.
Circulation and Blood Vessels
Your heart and blood vessels make up your overall
blood circulatory system. Your blood circulatory system is made up of four
subsystems.
Arterial Circulation
Arterial circulation is the part of your overall
blood circulatory system that involves arteries, like the aorta and pulmonary
arteries.
Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away
from your heart. Healthy arteries are strong and elastic. They become narrow
between beats of the heart, and they help keep your blood pressure consistent.
This helps blood circulate efficiently through your body.
Arteries branch into smaller blood vessels called
arterioles (ar-TEER-e-ols). Arteries and arterioles have strong, flexible walls
that allow them to adjust the amount and rate of blood flowing to various parts
of your body.
Venous Circulation
Venous circulation is the part of your overall blood
circulatory system that involves veins, like the vena cavae and pulmonary
veins. Veins are blood vessels that carry blood to your heart.
Veins have thinner walls than arteries. Veins can
widen as the amount of blood passing through them increases.
Capillary Circulation
Capillary circulation is the part of your overall
blood circulatory system where oxygen, nutrients, and waste pass between your
blood and parts of your body.
Capillaries connect the arterial and venous
circulatory subsystems. Capillaries are very small blood vessels.
The importance of capillaries lies in their very
thin walls. Unlike arteries and veins, capillary walls are thin enough that
oxygen and nutrients in your blood can pass through the walls to the parts of
your body that need them to work normally.
Capillaries' thin walls also allow waste products
like carbon dioxide to pass from your body's organs and tissues into the blood,
where it's taken away to your lungs.
Pulmonary Circulation
Pulmonary circulation is the movement of blood from
the heart to the lungs and back to the heart again. Pulmonary circulation
includes both arterial and venous circulation.
Blood without oxygen is pumped to the lungs from the
heart (arterial circulation). Oxygen-rich blood moves from the lungs to the
heart through the pulmonary veins (venous circulation).
Pulmonary circulation also includes capillary
circulation. Oxygen you breathe in from the air passes through your lungs into
your blood through the many capillaries in the lungs. Oxygen-rich blood moves
through your pulmonary veins to the left side of your heart and out of the
aorta to the rest of your body.
Capillaries in the lungs also remove carbon dioxide
from your blood so that your lungs can breathe the carbon dioxide out into the
air.
Your Heart's Electrical System
The animation below shows how your heart's
electrical system works. Click the "start" button to play the animation.
Written and spoken explanations are provided with each frame. Use the buttons
in the lower right corner to pause, restart, or replay the animation, or use
the scroll bar below the buttons to move through the frames.
The animation shows how the heart's
internal electrical conduction system causes the heart to pump blood.
Your heart's electrical system controls all the
events that occur when your heart pumps blood. The electrical system also is
called the cardiac conduction system. If you've ever seen the heart test called
an EKG
(electrocardiogram), you've seen a graphical picture of the heart's electrical
activity.
Your heart's electrical system is made up of three
main parts:
The sinoatrial (SA) node, located in the right
atrium of your heart
The atrioventricular (AV) node, located on the
interatrial septum close to the tricuspid valve
The His-Purkinje system, located along the walls
of your heart's ventricles
A heartbeat is a complex series of events that take
place in your heart. A heartbeat is a single cycle in which your heart's
chambers relax and contract to pump blood. This cycle includes the opening and
closing of the inlet and outlet valves of the right and left ventricles of your
heart.
Each heartbeat has two basic parts: diastole and
atrial and ventricular systole. During diastole, the atria and ventricles of
your heart relax and begin to fill with blood.
At the end of diastole, your heart's atria contract
(atrial systole) and pump blood into the ventricles. The atria then begin to
relax. Your heart's ventricles then contract (ventricular systole), pumping
blood out of your heart.
Each beat of your heart is set in motion by an
electrical signal from within your heart muscle. In a normal, healthy heart,
each beat begins with a signal from the SA node. This is why the SA node is
sometimes called your heart's natural pacemaker. Your pulse, or heart rate, is
the number of signals the SA node produces per minute.
The signal is generated as the two vena cavae fill
your heart's right atrium with blood from other parts of your body. The signal
spreads across the cells of your heart's right and left atria. This signal
causes the atria to contract. This action pushes blood through the open valves
from the atria into both ventricles.
The signal arrives at the AV node near the
ventricles. It slows for an instant to allow your heart's right and left
ventricles to fill with blood. The signal is released and moves along a pathway
called the bundle of His, which is located in the walls of your heart's
ventricles.
From the bundle of His, the signal fibers divide
into left and right bundle branches through the Purkinje fibers that connect
directly to the cells in the walls of your heart's left and right ventricles
(see yellow on the picture in the animation).
The signal spreads across the cells of your
ventricle walls, and both ventricles contract. However, this doesn't happen at
exactly the same moment.
The left ventricle contracts an instant before the
right ventricle. This pushes blood through the pulmonary valve (for the right
ventricle) to your lungs, and through the aortic valve (for the left ventricle)
to the rest of your body.
As the signal passes, the walls of the ventricles
relax and await the next signal.
This process continues over and over as the atria
refill with blood and other electrical signals come from the SA node.
Heart Disease
Your heart is made up of many parts working together
to pump blood. In a healthy heart, all the parts work well so that your heart
pumps blood normally. As a result, all parts of your body that depend on the
heart to deliver blood also stay healthy.
Heart disease can disrupt a heart's normal
electrical system and pumping functions. Diseases and conditions of the heart's
muscle make it hard for your heart to pump blood normally.
Damaged or diseased blood vessels make the heart
work harder than normal. Problems with the heart's electrical system, called
arrhythmias
(ah-RITH-me-ahs), can make it hard for the heart to pump blood efficiently.
The Diseases and Conditions Index (DCI) has a number
of articles on various heart diseases and conditions. For more information, go
to the DCI home
page.