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Cardiovascular Diseases
Anatomy and Function of the Heart's Electrical System
The heart's electrical system:
The heart is, in the simplest terms, a pump made up of muscle tissue.
Like all pumps, the heart requires a source of energy in order to
function. The heart's pumping energy comes from an intrinsic electrical
conduction system.
How does the heart beat?
An electrical stimulus is generated by the sinus node (also called the
sinoatrial node, or SA node), which is a small mass of specialized
tissue located in the right atrium (right upper chamber) of the heart.
The sinus node generates an electrical stimulus periodically (60 to 100
times per minute under normal conditions). This electrical stimulus
travels down through the conduction pathways (similar to the way
electricity flows through power lines from the power plant to your
house) and causes the heart's chambers to contract and pump out blood.
The right and left atria (the two upper chambers of the heart) are
stimulated first and contract a short period of time before the right
and left ventricles (the two lower chambers of the heart). The
electrical impulse travels from the sinus node to the atrioventricular
(AV) node, where it stops for a very short period, then continues down
the conduction pathways via the bundle of His into the ventricles. The
bundle of His divides into right and left pathways to provide electrical
stimulation to both ventricles.
Normally, as the electrical impulse moves through the heart, the heart
contracts about 60 to 100 times a minute. Each contraction represents
one heartbeat. The atria contract a fraction of a second before the
ventricles so their blood empties into the ventricles before the
ventricles contract.
For more information, please contact the Stanford Health Library
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