Afterload is the tension or stress developed in the wall of the left ventricle during ejection.
Papillary muscles are fingerlike projections from the wall of the left ventricle.
The test looks at the movements of the wall of the left ventricle and the heart valves.
In one case series, if myocardial rupture involved the free wall of the left ventricle, the mortality rate was 100.0%.
This or periventricular formation lies along the wall of the third ventricle.
The other had passed through the right side of the heart to embed itself in the wall of the left ventricle.
Like any muscle, the walls of the left ventricle become thick from all of this work, a condition called hypertrophy.
Here, the impulses are delayed for about 0.1s before spreading to the walls of the ventricle.
The lamina terminalis forms the anterior wall of the third ventricle.
Located in the posterior hypothalamus near the wall of the third ventricle is an area called the primary motor center for shivering.