general structure
Last reviewed 01/2018
The general structure of heart valves is dependent on the valve:
- tricuspid and mitral valves:
- each leaflet is a flat sheet
- the margin of each leaflet has serrations where the chordae tendineae attach
- the chordae tendineae are attached to papillary muscles which contract during systole; the increased tension within the chordae and muscles acts to:
- prevent eversion of the valve
- limit ventricular distention as the left ventricular pressure rises
- therefore, tricuspid and mitral valve competence depends on the active process of papillary muscle contraction
- during diastole, the valve leaflets merge at their free margins and overlap each other centrally
- aortic and pulmonary valves:
- each leaflet is ballooned into a cup-shaped concavity when viewed from the aorta
- during diastole, the column of blood superior to the vessel forces out the leaflets from above, filling their concavities and forcing the aortic valve leaflets together
- therefore, closure of the aortic and pulmonary valves is a passive process
- there is no attachment to chorae tendineae
- a sinus - a dilation of the outflow vessel - exists superior to each valve leaflet:
- vortices, circular currents of blood, develop within the sinus during systole
- they prevent the individual leaflets from adhering to the wall of the outflow vessel, so rendering the valve incompetent
- each leaflet has a fibrous nodule at its centre which is a thickening of its lamina fibrosa