Diagram of a normal heart compared to a heart with an interventricular septal defect
Dublin Core
Title
Diagram of a normal heart compared to a heart with an interventricular septal defect
Subject
Open Heart Surgery
Description
An interventricular, or ventricular septal defect (VSD), is a congenital heart defect. VSD is a hole in the ventricular septum, or wall, that divides the lower chambers--the left and right ventricle--of the heart. The hole allows the exchange of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood between the two chambers and can cause a person to have a bluish tint to their skin, troubled breathing, swelling, and irregular heartbeat.
Creator
University of Minnesota
Source
"Controlled Cross Circulation and Direct Vision Heart Surgery Scrapbook, 1954-1956," Box 145, University Relations collection, uarc0875, University of Minnesota Archives
Publisher
University of Minnesota
Date
1954
Rights
Use of this image is governed by U.S. and international copyright laws. Image is property of the University of Minnesota. Please contact the University of Minnesota Archives for permission to publish this image. http://special.lib.umn.edu/uarch
Format
Document
Language
eng
Identifier
oh0036
Coverage
Open Heart Surgery
Text Item Type Metadata
Original Format
Paper
Citation
University of Minnesota, “Diagram of a normal heart compared to a heart with an interventricular septal defect,” Gallery, accessed June 8, 2023, http://gallerytemp.reclaim.hosting/items/show/3366.