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Heart Disease Health Center

Anatomy Guide: Heart & Rhythm Disorders

Normal Sinus Rhythm

To pump blood through the body, the heart "runs" on electrical impulses that stimulate its chambers (atria and ventricles) to rhythmically contract and relax with each heartbeat. Most healthy hearts have normal sinus rhythm. "Normal" refers to a heart (pulse) rate between 60 and 100. "Sinus" refers to the sinoatrial or SA node -- The origin of the electrical impulse that "starts" each beat.

We trace the flow of electricity through the heart with an ECG (electrocardiogram) as shown in the animation. The "P wave" represents the electricity flowing through the atria or upper chambers of the heart. The "QRS complex" represents the flow through the ventricles, the bottom chambers, as they contract to push the blood out from the heart. The "T wave" represents repolarization, the electrical "resetting" of the heart for the next beat. In the normal sinus rhythm the ECG waves are usually regular, meaning their peaks are evenly spaced.

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