Pectinate muscles

Muscular ridges found in the heart From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pectinate muscles

The pectinate muscles (musculi pectinati) are parallel muscular ridges in the walls of the atria of the heart.

Quick Facts Details, Identifiers ...
Pectinate muscles
Thumb
Section of the heart showing the ventricular septum. (Pectinate muscles labeled at center left.)
Thumb
Details
Identifiers
Latinmusculi pectinati atrii dextri,
musculi pectinati atrii sinistri
FMA12226
Anatomical terminology
Close
Thumb

Structure

Behind the crest (crista terminalis) of the right atrium the internal surface is smooth.[1] Pectinate muscles make up the part of the wall in front of this, the right atrial appendage.[citation needed]

In the left atrium, the pectinate muscles are confined to the inner surface of its atrial appendage.[1] They tend to be fewer and smaller than in the right atrium. This is due to the embryological origin of the auricles, which are the true atria. Some sources cite that the pectinate muscles are useful in increasing the power of contraction without increasing heart mass substantially.[citation needed]

Pectinate muscles of the atria are different from the trabeculae carneae, which are found on the inner walls of both ventricles.[citation needed] The pectinate muscles originate from the crista terminalis.[citation needed]

Name

The pectinate muscles are so-called because of their resemblance to the teeth of a comb, as in pecten.[citation needed]

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.