The structure of the atrioventricular conducting system in the avian heart

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Abstract

The atrioventricular conduction system in three avian species has been studied by light and electron microscopy. A morphologically definable atrioventricular node was not found in any of these. The atrioventricular bundle is a well‐defined structure, the proximal portion of which is in direct continuity with the atrioventricular ring, located in the arterial sheet of the muscular valve of the right atrioventricular opening. In the zone of transition between atrioventricular ring and bundle the compactness of the bundle is loosened, but the fibers do not establish continuity with the atrial fibers. The ring consists of Purkinje‐like fibers, 10–15 μm in diameter, and (peripherally) small 3–5‐μm‐diameter junctional fibers which are in continuity with the common atrial fibers. In the muscular atrioventricular valve the fibers of the ring are insulated from the ventricular myocardium by a connective tissue sheet of the annulus fibrosus. It is suggested that in the avian heart the atrioventricular ring may fulfill a role similar to that of the atrioventricular node of mammals. Copyright © 1986 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.

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Szabóa, E., Virágh, S., & Challice, C. E. (1986). The structure of the atrioventricular conducting system in the avian heart. The Anatomical Record, 215(1), 1–9. https://doi.org/10.1002/ar.1092150102

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