Advertisement
Advertisement
ventricle
[ ven-tri-kuhl ]
noun
- Zoology. any of various hollow organs or parts in an animal body.
- Anatomy.
- either of the two lower chambers on each side of the heart that receive blood from the atria and in turn force it into the arteries.
- one of a series of connecting cavities of the brain.
ventricle
/ ˈvɛntrɪkəl /
noun
- a chamber of the heart, having thick muscular walls, that receives blood from the atrium and pumps it to the arteries
- any one of the four main cavities of the vertebrate brain, which contain cerebrospinal fluid
- any of various other small cavities in the body
ventricle
/ vĕn′trĭ-kəl /
- A chamber of the heart that receives blood from one or more atria and pumps it by muscular contraction into the arteries. Mammals, birds, and reptiles have two ventricles; amphibians and fish have one.
- Any of four fluid-filled cavities in the brain of vertebrate animals. The ventricles are filled with cerebrospinal fluid.
Word History and Origins
Origin of ventricle1
Word History and Origins
Origin of ventricle1
Example Sentences
Harry Vanderspeigle has a big room in my heart, like my left ventricle.
They examined the hearts of young and old mice and discovered that as the rodents aged, nerve fibers disappeared from the left ventricle, the chamber that pumps blood to most of the body.
The condition affects the heart's largest pumping chamber, the left ventricle, which pumps blood from the heart throughout the body.
In a recent study, researchers from Japan tested a novel approach that involves injecting 'cardiac spheroids,' cultured from human stem cells, directly into damaged ventricles.
During atrial fibrillation, the heart's upper chambers beat irregularly and are out of sync with the ventricles.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse