Abstract
Branching angles and branch diameters were measured in a total of 850 arterial junctions in the coronary networks of two human hearts. Comparison is made with similar data obtained previously from the coronary networks of rats, and with what is considered to be optimum on theoretical grounds. It is concluded that the branching characteristics of the human coronary arteries are closer to the theroretical optimum than those of the coronary networks of rats. While the human data exhibit some departure from optimality and a good amount of scatter, these are well within levels observed elsewhere in the cardiovascular systems of man and animals, and considerably better than those found in the coronary networks of rats. The departure from optimality, in terms of physiological cost to the system, is within 5% for most data points.
Publisher
Canadian Science Publishing
Subject
Physiology (medical),Pharmacology,General Medicine,Physiology
Cited by
84 articles.
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