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Double-chambered left ventricle – a “heart within a heart”

Forensic Science, Medicine and Pathology, 2018
A 20-year-old previously well man drowned after performing a back-flip off a bridge into a river. At autopsy no significant injuries or organic illness were identified. An unusual incidental finding was a double chambered left ventricle, or so-called "heart within a heart", with the left ventricle subdivided into two separate chambers by a muscular ...
John D, Gilbert, Roger W, Byard
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Lipid composition of beef heart ventricle

Lipids, 1967
AbstractThe lipid class composition of beef heart ventricle was determined by a combination of diethylaminoethyl cellulose column chromatography and quantitative thin‐layer chromatography. Percentages of the total lipid were: triglyceride, 43.6; cholesterol, 7.4; phosphatidyl choline, 22.8; phingomyelin, 4.0; phosphatidyl ethanolamine, 11.2 ...
M L, Das, G, Rouser
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Right Ventricle Rupture After Open Heart Surgery

American Journal of Forensic Medicine & Pathology, 2019
Abstract The potential complications of cardiac surgery with sternotomy include mediastinitis and major bleeding, events that are infrequent but carry high mortality. We report a unique complication of median sternotomy. A 71-year-old man underwent coronary artery bypass grafting complicated by sternal dehiscence on postoperative ...
Deland, Weyrauch   +2 more
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Univentricular Heart (Singe Ventricle)

2007
The arrangement in which both atria connect to one ventricle is described as double inlet ventricle. Univentricular atrioventricular connection by means of an absent left or right connection is frequently referred to in the literature as mitral and tricuspid atresia.
Wei Li   +2 more
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Actomyosin content of rabbit heart ventricle

American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1964
The requirements for quantitative extraction of rabbit cardiac actomyosin were investigated. Extraction of the tissue was carried out at pH 6.5. Under these conditions, precipitation of actomyosin from the soluble tissue extract showed a plateau between pH 6.9 and 7.1.
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The Right Ventricle in Congenital Heart Disease

Cardiology Clinics, 1992
An increasing number of children with congenital heart disease are surviving into adulthood, creating new, unusual patients with different physiologic and anatomic problems for the adult cardiologist. This article discusses those lesions affecting primarily the right ventricle.
Z M, Hijazi, W E, Hellenbrand
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Fetal Heart Echocardiography: Single Ventricle

2015
A 27-year-old pregnant woman (6 months of pregnancy) was referred for fetal heart echocardiography. Her first pregnancy had been terminated because of genetic abnormalities. She and her husband were relatives.
Hakimeh Sadeghian, Zahra Savand-Roomi
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The Right Ventricle in Congenital Heart Diseases

2014
Right ventricular function is an important determinant of prognosis and outcome in congenital heart diseases. Right ventricular (RV) adaptation to congenital heart diseases (CHD) has many faces as there is a wide variety in defects involving the right ventricle as well as in treatment strategies.
Bartelds, Beatrijs, Berger, Rolf M. F.
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Sodium Exchange in the Frog Heart Ventricle

American Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1957
The isolated frog heart ventricle was used to study the kinetics of uptake and release of radioactive sodium. Sucrose was used as an extracellular space indicator. A flux of sodium across the ventricle cell membranes of 15 x 10–12 m/cm2 sec. was calculated from the data.
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[Fibrillation of the heart ventricles].

Anesteziologiia i reanimatologiia, 1997
During ventricular fibrillation, extra feedback may form in the myocardial structure due to specific features of such fibrillation, specifically, because of highly asynchronous contractions of some parts of the myocardium; these newly forming feedback is conducive to a persistent development of such arrhythmia.
A M, Chernysh, M S, Bogushevich
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