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1.2: Position of the Heart

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    The cardiac silhouette is generally taken to be trapezoidal in shape. The rib cage provides good markers for charting the cardiac silhouette. The normal position of the cardiac apex is generally taken to be in the fifth intercostal space in the mid-clavicular line. The lower border is a nearly horizontal line in the area of the left sixth rib to the right sixth costal cartilage (Figure 1.2.1). The upper border is hidden behind the sternum at the level of the second and third cartilages. The right margin of the heart peeps out behind the right border of the sternum between the right third and sixth cartilages. In the infant, the upper part of the cardiac shadow is broad owing to the prominence of the overlying thymus gland.

    450px-Figure_2.svg.png
    Figure 1.2.1: The long axis of the heart is at an angle to the long axis of the body. Approximately a third of the heart is to the right of the midline of the sternum and the remainder is to the left of the midline.

    Inferior to the thymus, a fibrous pericardial sac encloses the mass of the heart. The sac has cuff-like attachments around the adventitia of the great arteries and veins as they enter or emerge from the heart. The pericardial cavity is contained between the double-layered serous pericardium. The parietal pericardium is adherent to the fibrous pericardium while the visceral layer is densely adherent to the cardiac surface forming the epicardium. Due to the contours of the heart and great arteries there exist two recesses within the pericardial cavity. These are the transverse and oblique sinuses. The transverse sinus occupies the inner heart curvature and lies between the posterior surface of the great arteries and the anterior surface of the atrial chambers. The reflection of the serous pericardium around the four pulmonary veins and the inferior caval vein forms the oblique sinus.

    When the pericardium is removed, the major part of the heart visible from the front is the ventricular mass. Here, the morphologically right ventricle occupies the greater part (Figure 1.2.2). The left ventricle appears only as a narrow slip along the left cardiac border. The shape of the heart is generally likened to a pyramid. The apex points downwards, forwards and to the left while the base faces posteriorly and to the right. While the cardiac apex is usually represented by the vortex of the left ventricle, the cardiac base is less well defined owing to differences in definition.

    450px-Figure_3.svg.png
    Figure 1.2.2: (A) Viewed from the front, the right atrium and right ventricle overlaps the left atrium and left ventricle. The atrial chambers are to the right of their respective ventricular chambers. (B) The four cardiac valves are at different levels and different planes with the pulmonary(P) valve situated the most cephalad. The aortic(A) valve is wedged between the tricuspid(T) and mitral(M) valves.

    The anatomical base is formed mainly by the left atrium receiving the pulmonary veins and to a small extent by the posterior part of the right atrium. The base in clinical practice, however, refers to the portion of the heart near the parasternal parts of the second intercostal spaces. The cardiac long axis, therefore, lies in a line drawn from the left hypochondrium towards the right shoulder. This orientation deviates considerably from the long axis of the body. Furthermore, the position of the cardiac septum at about 45º to the median brings the ‘right heart’ structures anterior to the ‘left heart’ structures (Figure 1.2.2A). The ventricles are situated inferior and leftward relative to their corresponding atria.

    This results in the right atrioventricular junction being in a nearly vertical plane. The left atrium is the most posterior cardiac chamber being directly anterior to the oesophagus at the bifurcation of the trachea. In frontal projection, only its appendage is visible. The aorta has a deep-seated origin and only becomes part of the cardiac silhouette as it arches upwards and backwards, forming a spiral with the pulmonary trunk. The cardiac valves are offset from one another, in keeping with the disposition of the cardiac chambers and great arteries. When viewed in frontal projection, the pulmonary valve, being the most superior valve, is horizontally situated behind the third costal cartilage. The aortic valve lies posterior and to the right, above the nearly vertically orientated tricuspid valve (Figure 1.2.2B). The mitral valve is further posterior, overlapped by the more anterior but inferior tricuspid valve. The aortic valve therefore occupies a central position in the heart, wedged between the two atrioventricular valves.

    The cardiac surfaces are described as the sternocostal, diaphragmatic, left and right (Figure 1.2.3). The sternocostal surface is covered anteriorly by the sternum and pleurae. The diaphragmatic surface is horizontally orientated. The sharp angle formed mainly by the right ventricle and occupying the lower heart border is the acute margin of the heart. The rounded obtuse margin of the heart is formed mainly by the left ventricle to the left of the sternocostal surface.

    450px-Figure_4.jpg
    Figure 1.2.3: (A) This frontal view shows the right and left surfaces of the heart. The left anterior descending coronary artery buried in epicardial fat marks the plane of the ventricular septum. (B) The obtuse and acute margins of the ventricles are demonstrated in this apical view.

    This page titled 1.2: Position of the Heart is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 3.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by de Jong and van der Waals Eds. (Cardionetworks Foundation and the Health[e]Foundation) via source content that was edited to the style and standards of the LibreTexts platform.

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