Anatomy of the Heart and Coronary Circulation
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In this lecture, Professor Zach Murphy presents on the Anatomy of the Heart and Coronary Circulation. The session begins with an in-depth digital presentation using professional anatomical illustrations to explore the external and internal structure of the heart, including the fibrous and serous pericardium, the pericardial cavity, and the major surface landmarks. We identify the chambers of the heart and their key external features, including the right atrium with its auricle, the right ventricle with its anterior dominance, the left atrium receiving pulmonary veins, and the left ventricle forming the apex.
We then transition inside the heart to examine the flow of blood through the chambers and valves, emphasizing the tricuspid, pulmonic, mitral, and aortic valves and the structural components that keep them competent, including chordae tendineae and papillary muscles. The lecture continues with a detailed walkthrough of the interatrial and interventricular septa, highlighting clinically relevant features such as the fossa ovalis and the membranous septum as a key site for congenital defects and conduction system vulnerability.
Next, we break down the heart’s conduction system, tracing the electrical pathway from the SA node to the AV node, through the bundle of His and bundle branches, and into the Purkinje fibers. We connect this anatomy to clinical correlations, including why AV nodal or septal ischemia can produce bradyarrhythmias and heart block patterns.
We then focus on the coronary circulation in detail, mapping the right coronary artery and left coronary artery with their major branches, including the right marginal artery, posterior descending artery, left anterior descending artery, and circumflex artery. We emphasize coronary dominance patterns and how they influence which territories are affected during occlusion. Venous drainage is reviewed through the coronary sinus and its main tributaries, tying this to the posterior relationships of the heart and the importance of the atrioventricular groove.
We also cover the pericardial and cardiac innervation, reviewing sympathetic and parasympathetic contributions and visceral pain referral patterns that explain typical anginal presentations.
To conclude, we transition to @Anatomage where we visualize the heart, pericardium, great vessels, and coronary arteries in real digital cadaveric images, reinforcing the three-dimensional relationships between the heart, lungs, mediastinum, and diaphragm.
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Table of Contents:
0:00 Lab
Structural Anatomy
00:56 Layers of the Heart Wall
4:43 Chambers of the Heart
18:42 Valves of the Heart
Vascular Supply
23:11 Arteries of the Coronary Circulation
32:32 Veins of the Coronary Circulation
Cardiac Conduction System
36:17 Cardiac Conduction
Innervation of the Heart
40:24 Sympathetic Innervation (T1-T5 Cardiac Plexus)
41:56 Parasympathetic Innervation (Vagus nerve)
Great Vessels and Blood Flow
44:40 Deoxygenated Circuit
47:06 Heart Borders
Anatomage Visuals
49:00 Anatomage Heart Anatomy
Outro
51:58 Comment, Like, SUBSCRIBE!
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