Taking Your Health to New Heights
530.541.3420 Serving the Lake Tahoe Region & Beyond Connect With Us:
Health Library Giving Bill Pay Contact Us
Anatomy and Function of the Electrical System
Health Library
Share This Page
Facebook
Twitter
Google +

LinkedIn

Anatomy and Function of the 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 action is regulated by an electrical conduction system that coordinates the contraction of the various chambers of the heart.

Anatomy of the heart, view of the electrical system
Click Image to Enlarge

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). In an adult, the sinus node generates an electrical stimulus regularly at 60 to 100 times per minute. 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 lower 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 node (also called AV node), where impulses are slowed down for a very short period, then continue down the conduction pathway via the bundle of His into the ventricles. The bundle of His divides into right and left pathways to provide electrical stimulation to the right and left ventricles.

Normally at rest, as the electrical impulse moves through the heart, the heart contracts about 60 to 140 times a minute depending on a person's age. Each contraction of the ventricles 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.

Under some abnormal conditions, certain heart tissue is capable of starting a heartbeat, or becoming the "pacemaker," just like the sinus node. An arrhythmia (abnormal heartbeat) may occur when:

  • The heart's natural pacemaker (the sinus node) develops an abnormal rate or rhythm.

  • The normal conduction pathway is interrupted.

  • Another part of the heart takes over as pacemaker.

FIND A PHYSICIAN
Search by Physician Name
Search by Specialty
List of All Doctors
WELLNESS LECTURES & EVENTS
Sports Physicals
May 22, 2013
> view
View Full Calendar
CONTACT US
Call Us
530.541.3420
Visit Us
2170 South Ave.
South Lake Tahoe, CA
96150
SEARCH HEALTH LIBRARY
Search by Keywords
FIND A PHYSICIAN
Search by Physician Name
Search by Specialty
List of All Doctors
WELLNESS LECTURES & EVENTS
Sports Physicals
May 22, 2013
> view
View Full Calendar
CONTACT US
Call Us
530.541.3420
Visit Us
2170 South Ave.
South Lake Tahoe, CA
96150