Abstract
Hence the very opposite of the opinions commonly received, appears to be true; inasmuch as it is generally believed that when the heart strikes the breast and the pulse is felt without, the heart is dilated in its ventricles and is filled with blood; but the contrary of this is the fact, and the heart, when it contrasts, is emptied. Whence the motion which is generally regarded as the diastole of the heart, is in truth its systole. And in like manner the intrinsic motion of the heart is not the diastole but the systole; neither is it in the diastole that the heart grows firm and tense, but in the systole, for then only, is it moved and made vigorous.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Brutsaert, D. L., Housmans, P. R., & Goethals, M. A. (1980). Dual control of relaxation. Its role in the ventricular function in the mammalian heart. Circulation Research. https://doi.org/10.1161/01.RES.47.5.637
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