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.