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Why is the human heart on the left side?

Unsickle

Golden Member
This an extra credit problem what will be on my Materials Science final. It's a course on symmetry and crystallography.

Any thoughts?
 
when we're inside our mother's stomach, we tend to lay to our left side the most, therefore the heart shifts over there. Its been like that for a long time.
 
its really not on the left side, but is actually just about behind the sternum. it is just slightly to the left side of that though, so that is why most people say it is to the left....as far as why that is, its due to the lungs. your left lung has 2 lobes while your right lung has 3, so the left lung is about 2/3 the size of the right lung, to make room for the heart to sit over it and kind of push it further out to the side of the body. hope that helps
 
I was in my mommy's womb, not her stomach!

"Baby; the other, other white meat!" -the fat guy in Austin Powers2
 
Actually the reason why babies tend to lay on their left side is because their mommies lay on their left side ... was reading the other day where a doctor advised pregnant women to sleep on the left side rather than right while pregnant to reduce pain, and morning sickness ...
 


<< ah, you people have no knowledge >>


Hey, you're the one who thinks babiess are made in their mother's stomach!
 
I believe the regression to the curve showing the number of enemies Alf has made recently would be exponential. He's on a roll.
 
Do you know that 1 in 1000 (maybe it was 10000) people have their heart on their right side? Pretty weird huh?
 
really thelanx?? i hadn't heard of that, although it wouldn't really be that big of an anomaly, just a slight triggering of the opposite gene when the lungs are developing or a lack of twisting during embryo development and differentation of the tissues, so its not unheard of
 
the abnormality where the heart is on the right side of the thorax is called dextrocardia and may be associated with other organs being on the opposite side of where they would usually be (situs inversus). it's controlled by some gene, don't remember what it's called.
 
ALF, it might help you to know that babies don't develop in their mother's stomach. Just thought you should know 😉
 
well jhu backed me up🙂 i figured i'll learn the normal anatomy first jhu then deal w/ the problems in it🙂
 
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