Anatomy of Human Heart PowerPoint Presentation
Located in the slide design is an Anatomy of Human Heart PowerPoint Presentation , which may be used as a visual aid to illustrate the parts of a heart, which is ideal for a presentation of proposals for new medical developments.
This PowerPoint slide shows a cross-section illustration of the human heart. This illustration shows the parts of the heart such as the veins, arteries and its chambers. It also shows each part labelled with its medical names. The heart’s walls and muscles are also very visible in this illustration. Another notable feature of the illustration is the clearly depicted borders and divisions of each chambers and veins. In this design, the part muscle part is clearly identified by its pink color and white borders around it. The PowerPoint objects are 100% editable to suit the presenter’s needs and preferences.
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The Heart- Structure and Function
Sep 11, 2014
510 likes | 1.59k Views
The Heart- Structure and Function. Lungs. Body cells. Our circulatory system is a double circulatory system. This means it has two parts. the right side of the system deals with deoxygenated blood. the left side of the system deals with oxygenated blood. The Heart.
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- blood pressure
- oxygenated blood
- ventricles contract
- regular heart rhythm
- atrioventricular bicuspid mitral valve
Presentation Transcript
Lungs Body cells Our circulatory system is a double circulatory system. This means it has two parts . the right side of the system deals with deoxygenated blood. the left side of the system deals with oxygenated blood.
The Heart This is a vein. It brings blood from the body, except the lungs. These are arteries. They carry blood away from the heart. 2 atria Coronary arteries, the hearts own blood supply 2 ventricles The heart has four chambers now lets look inside the heart
The Heart The Heart Superior vena cava Left pulmonary arteries Aorta Left pulmonary veins Semilunar valve Left atrium Right atrium Atrioventricular/bicuspid / mitral valve Atrioventricular/ tricuspid valve Semilunar valve Inferior vena cava Left ventricle Right ventricle http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D3ZDJgFDdk0
blood from the lungs blood from the body The heart beat begins when the heart muscles relaxand blood flows into all four chamber. The Heart Cycle and Sounds STEP ONE: Diastole Relax STEP TWO: Diastole Contract The atria then contract and the valves open to allow blood into the ventricles. This process results in a ‘lubb’ sound http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/hhw/hhw_pumping.html
The valves close to stop blood • flowing backwards. • The ventricles contract forcing • the blood to leave the heart. • This process results in a ‘dubb’ sound. • At the same time, the atria are • relaxing and once again filling with • blood. STEP THREE: Systole The cycle then repeats itself. http://www.execulink.com/~ekimmel/forensic_flash_quiz4.swf
Co-ordination of the Cardiac Cycle • The heart is made of cardiac muscle. • When the cells receive an electricalimpulse they contract - causing a heartbeat. • Cardiac muscle can contract on its own, without needing nerveimpulses.
Sinoatrial node (SA node) This specialized excitatory muscle cells make an electric impulse. This signal travels across the atria causing them to contract and load the ventricles with blood.
Atrio-ventricular node (AV node) The AV node is a second bundle of excitatory muscle cells. Impulse from the SA Node to the AV node, causes an impulse in the AV node. Which causes the ventricles to contract and forces blood out of the heart to lungs and organs.
the ventricles contract
Electrocardiograph- see textbook pg 305, Fig 9-27 P to Q wave = SA impulse or atrial depolarization (loses electrical charge) Q→R → S wave = AV impulse or ventricular depolarization (loses electrical charge) S →T wave = ventricular repolarization (regains electrical charge) **Note: Atrial repolarization is NOT seen because it happens during the AV impulse** Records electrical activity of heart to monitor heart function.
Monitoring your Heartbeat and Blood pressure
Ventricular fibrillation is an abnormal heart rhythm that is disorganized and irregular.
Ventricular tachycardia is a rapid, regular heart rhythm that originates in the lower chambers of the heart.
Blood Pressure Is the pressure exerted on the walls of the arteries. There are 2 components to blood pressure: Systolic pressure is the pressure that the blood exerts on the aorta when blood leaves the heart during systole. Diastolic pressure is the pressure that the blood exerts on the aorta when noblood leaves the heart during diastole. Normal blood pressure is systolic = 120 mm Hg diastolic 80 mm Hg
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Heart Anatomy
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The heart is one of the most vital organs in the human body. Its role in sustaining life is paramount, as it pumps blood throughout the body, delivering essential nutrients and oxygen to all the organs and tissues. But... why does it look nothing like the cute shape we always draw? Maybe that's something that can be answered from the point of view of anatomy. This template is here to display all the information and concepts that you need to teach. All backgrounds have textures, and the slides come with a nice frame. Needless to say, every resource included is editable!
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Lay your hands on our Human Heart PPT template to describe the muscular organ responsible for pumping blood through the vessels of your circulatory system. Cardiologists can leverage this exclusively designed set to represent the development of the heart from the embryogenesis stage and its anatomy. Using these PowerPoint slides, you can also demonstrate the types of circulation, heart diseases, their diagnosis, and treatments.
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Are Your Presentations Too Emotional — or Too Analytical?
When making a presentation, leaders need to balance appeals to both logic and emotion — the head and the heart..
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When you have the opportunity to connect with an audience, stating fact after fact is not the way to go. You have an opportunity to connect more deeply than you can with just facts. Granted, some presentations are solely to convey updated information. But if that’s the case, you’re probably better off just emailing the particulars and saving everyone time. The best use of a presentation is to motivate others.
Staying flat and factual can work in a scientific report setting, but it won’t help motivate most audiences. Facts alone don’t help audience members understand why the information is important: You’re possibly relying too heavily on attendees to surmise the meaning behind them and make connections between point A and point B. You’re making the audience work way too hard to identify the decision you’re hoping to persuade them to make.
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Using emotion is a way to bring emphasis to the details and help them stand out. You want to complement facts with a pinch of content that will help the audience understand the value of the data and the valuable outcomes if it’s acted upon — or the consequences of it being ignored.
But if you had an audience of, say, biotech engineers, and you pulled the emotional strings too hard, that would be a huge mistake. And if you had a sales team you were trying to pump up, and you went full-on data, that would also be a mistake. You need to empathetically think about what’s going to be the right amount of emotional appeal and the right amount of intellectual appeal for your audience before your presentation. You need to blend your content the right way, almost like a recipe. You need balance.
Credibility plays a crucial role in this balancing act. By demonstrating that you have an understanding of the audience’s preferences and needs, you’re establishing common ground, and that reinforces your reliability. Your established trustworthiness and expertise provide a solid foundation that amplifies the impact of your presentation.
This isn’t a new idea. Back in the fourth century B.C., the Greek philosopher Aristotle claimed that to persuade, one must employ three types of argument:
- Logos, or logical appeal, where the speaker provides evidence through words and data.
- Pathos, or emotional appeal, where the speaker stirs the emotions and imaginations of audience members.
- Ethos, or ethical appeal, where the speaker leans into their existing credibility and character.
Aristotle’s rhetorical appeals are still relevant today. What’s key for managers, and often quite difficult, is knowing how to balance these appeals to an audience. Whether you’re presenting to a room full of engineers, a group of potential investors, or your colleagues and peers, the ability to calculate the right level of logic and emotion — in a way that resonates with the audience’s roles, industries, and problems — is a profoundly useful skill.
First, Understand Your Audience
The first step in reaching for this balance is understanding your audience members. Are they data-driven decision makers who thrive on statistics and factual evidence? Or are they more likely to be swayed by personal stories and emotional connections? The industry, department, and roles of your audience members may help you define the ratio of analytical to emotional content to aim for as you engage them. If you don’t take time to understand your audience, you risk creating an imbalance. What’s more, when you show up with emotional or analytical energy that doesn’t match the audience’s, it hurts your credibility. (See “An Analytical and Emotional Balance That’s Just Right.”)
When presenting to analytical audiences, you want to pull back on how much you apply an emotional appeal. Use it lightly and with intention. Heavily analytical folks are still human, so it can be motivating to include material in a presentation that shows, for example, how lives will be changed if people take action from the data presented.
For more emotionally driven audiences or emotionally charged content, you want to pull back on the analytical appeal. Allow the audience to become immersed in all the feels. Emotionally driven audiences don’t enjoy the overuse of facts and details. They want to know that data has been carefully considered, but they likely won’t want to see 20 slides with charts.
The right balance is key. Even if you’re the most remarkable presenter in the world, being too geeky or too expressive in your storytelling can create a chasm between you and the audience.
For example, it’s easy for many of us to get caught up in numbers. To be successful in most jobs, we work with data, charts, graphs, timelines, and dashboards all the time. But when launching a revolutionary new product, it’d be unwise to overwhelm an audience with too many figures. While analytical content is essential, it should always be presented in a digestible and engaging manner.
Facts and Feelings: The Perfect Blend for Persuasive Presentations
To address both the mind and the heart, you must create a compelling narrative that is both persuasive and memorable. To do this, step back and inventory your slides to identify any content that can be made either more analytical or more emotional. Think about what balance you’re aiming for overall. Change the tone and content of slides where appropriate; for example, a slide with statistical data can be followed by a slide with a powerful quote or a compelling image.
Examples of typical types of analytical content include statistical data and facts; charts, graphs, and visual data; quotations from experts; logical arguments and reasoning; citations from research and studies; diagrams and explanatory videos; demonstrations and specimens; and appendices with documentation.
Examples of typical types of emotional content include anecdotes and stories; humor; emotive exclamations, like “This is amazing”; evocative photos and illustrations; metaphors and similes; suspenseful reveals and bold statements; dramatic music and sound effects; dramatizations and physical props; and rewards, benefits, and offers.
Whether you’re tilting to the head or the heart, you need to connect with the audience on a personal level.
Of course, analytics and emotions often can be blended for impact. You can attach data to anecdotes or tell stories about the people who generated the logical arguments to humanize your message. Charts and graphs can be designed to evoke emotion — for example, a chart can be revealed gradually , bar by bar, to create suspense and keep the audience invested in your narrative, and a graph showing a significant improvement can be paired with images of the team celebrating the achievement. And connecting data to something the audience really cares about demonstrates its value and makes it sticky. For example, don’t just say that a product creates 30% efficiency; say, “Our product creates 30% efficiency. Now, imagine how much more time you’ll have each day for higher priorities if each task is completed faster.”
Tying rewards, benefits, or offers directly to your call to action can further enhance the emotional appeal of your presentation. For instance, emphasizing how adopting a new strategy will not only improve efficiency but also lead to tangible payoffs, such as bonuses or professional growth opportunities, creates a compelling reason for your audience to act. This connection between action and personal gain helps motivate and engage your audience on a deeper emotional level.
And whether you’re tilting to the head or the heart, you need to connect with the audience on a personal level. When detailing statistics about a new product launch, share the stories about the journey of its development, highlighting the challenges overcome and the passion behind its creation.
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While logical arguments can lead audience members to agree with you intellectually, emotional resonance is often what spurs them into action. Using storytelling and powerful imagery and connecting data to relatable scenarios can evoke that emotional response. (For more must-do’s for creating a presentation that lands well, see “ How to Create Slides That Suit Your Superiors: 11 Tips .”)
Are you ready to elevate your communication skills? By carefully balancing analytical and emotional content, you can craft presentations grounded in facts that also engage and persuade your audience. Paying attention to the balance in your messaging gets your audience excited to move forward . This is the true power of effective presentations and presenters: the ability to drive people toward action.
About the Author
Nancy Duarte is CEO of Duarte Inc. , a communication company in the Silicon Valley. She’s the author of six books, including DataStory: Explain Data and Inspire Action Through Story (Ideapress Publishing, 2019).
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Serous membrane - epithelial membrane the secretes a thin, watery fluid (lubricant) - eases the movement of the heart. Pericardium - membrane that encloses the heart. Layers of the Heart. Endocardium. Smooth layer. Lines the interior. Valves are made from this layer. Layers of the Heart. Myocardium.
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Heart Presentation templates We wholeheartedly want to invite you to pour all your heart into editing these amazing presentations about hearts! This is the strongest muscle in your body and it never rests, it's always working for you.
1 Cardiovascular (Circulatory) System 2 3 Systemic Circulation - delivers blood to all body cells and carries away waste Pulmonary Circulation - eliminates carbon dioxide and oxygenates blood (lung pathway) 4 Structure of the Heart Heart Size - about 14 cm x 9 cm (the size of a fist). Located in the mediastinum. between the 2 nd rib and ...
Major Components. Heart: Acts as the pump. Continuously circulates the blood. Networks of tubes: Arteries move blood AWAY from the heart. Veins bring blood back to the heart. Blood: Fluid that fills the circulatory system.
The Heart. Lecture Presentation by Lori Garrett, Parkland College. 20-1 Describe the anatomy of the heart, including vascular supply and pericardium structure, and trace the flow of blood through the heart, identifying the major blood vessels, chambers, and heart valves. 20-2 Explain the events of an action potential in cardiac muscle, indicate ...
Heart Anatomy . Size, Location, and Orientation Enclosed in the mediastinum Base (posteriorsuperior portion) and Apex (inferioranterior portion) . Heart Anatomy. Coverings Pericardium protects the heart anchors the heart to surrounding structures such as the diaphragm and the great vessels prevents overfilling of the heart with blood .
A PowerPoint slide that shows a cross-section illustration of the human heart with its parts labelled. The slide is editable and suitable for presentations of medical proposals or anatomy lessons.
Anatomy of a Heart Presentation. Premium Google Slides theme, PowerPoint template, and Canva presentation template. The heart is arguably the most important organ in the human body, and it's amazing to think about all the complex functions it performs. It supplies precious oxygen and nutrients with every beat.
Presentation Transcript. Anatomy of the Heart. The heart is located in the chest cavity, surrounded by the pericardial sac, in the anterior portion of the mediastinum. The Pericardium Pericardial cavity The pericardium is a double-walled sac (pericardial sac) that encloses the heart. Parietal pericardium Visceral pericardium (epicardium ...
The Heart- Structure and Function. Lungs. Body cells. Our circulatory system is a double circulatory system. This means it has two parts. the right side of the system deals with deoxygenated blood. the left side of the system deals with oxygenated blood. The Heart. Download Presentation blood blood pressure oxygenated blood ventricles contract regular heart rhythm atrioventricular bicuspid ...
Heart failure. When the heart can no longer do this, blood that. A healthy heart should be able to pump blood to all parts of the body in a few seconds. should be pumped out of the heart backs up in the lungs and other parts of the body. This results is symptoms of heart failure: shortness of breath or swelling in the hands, legs, and feet.
Check out this medical presentation on Atrium, which is titled "The Cardiovascular System: The Heart", to know about the heart anatomy and the cardiovascular system.
Heart Anatomy Presentation. Premium Google Slides theme, PowerPoint template, and Canva presentation template. The heart is one of the most vital organs in the human body. Its role in sustaining life is paramount, as it pumps blood throughout the body, delivering essential nutrients and oxygen to all the organs and tissues.
Lay your hands on our Human Heart PPT template to describe the muscular organ responsible for pumping blood through the vessels of your circulatory system. Cardiologists can leverage this exclusively designed set to represent the development of the heart from the embryogenesis stage and its anatomy. Using these PowerPoint slides, you can also ...
The American Heart Association has created presentation-ready PowerPoint slides on clinical guidelines to use for your unique teaching and learning needs.
Column Are Your Presentations Too Emotional — or Too Analytical? When making a presentation, leaders need to balance appeals to both logic and emotion — the head and the heart.