HEAET 



199 



These muscular columns may present any one of three modes of 

 attachment to the myocardium: (1) they may be attached along their 

 entire extent; (2) they may he attached only at their two ends, the mid- 

 portion being free; (3) they may he attached to the myocardium at one 

 end only, the other end projecting into the ventricular cavity as a papil- 

 lary muscle, from whose apex chordae tendinese pass to the auriculoven- 



Main Bundle of His 

 Pulmonary Veins 



Fossa Ovalis 

 Inf. Cavd' 



Coronary Sinus 

 Rt'ticulum 



Artery to Bundle 



Tricuspid V alve 



Riyht Ventricle 



ChordtE Tendinete 



Papillary Muscle 



Sup. Cava 



Aorta 



Pulmonary Artery 



I .1/i/-.ri</.;r Filirrs Streaming to 

 \ the Rctifuhirn 

 Right Auricle 



Pars Mem. Septi 

 ( Bi f urrnl ion uf Main Bundle into 

 \ Right -mil Li'ft Sept. Branches 

 Right Septiil Branch 



Moderator Band 



FIG. 215. HUMAN HEART OPENED FROM THE RIGHT TO SHOW THE ATRIOVEN- 



TRICULAR BUNDLE OF His. 



The illustration shows also a heart valve, the chordae tendineae, and the pap- 

 illary muscles. (After Curran, Anat. Rec., 3, 12, 1909.) 



tricular valves. Either of the last two forms may, in transections of the 

 ventricles, appear as isolated islands of muscular tissue surrounded by 

 endocardium and lying apparently free within the cavity of the ventricle. 

 Columnar carna? which span the ventricular cavity constitute moderator 

 bands. One such hand is frequently present in the right ventricle near the 

 apex, and occasionally one appears in the left ventricle. 



Atrioventricular Bundle. The atrioventricular bundle of His w r as 

 discovered in the human heart by His, Jr., in 1893. Previously in the 

 same year it had been noted by Kent in the heart of a number of mam- 

 mals. It has since been seen in every species of mammal investigated. 



