Left atrium

Changed by Craig Hacking, 8 Dec 2016

Updates to Article Attributes

Body was changed:

The left atrium is one of the four chambers of the heart. It receives oxygenated blood from the pulmonary circulation that is then delivered to the left ventricle and then into the systemic circulation.

Gross anatomy

The left atrium is grossly cuboidal, and like the right atrium has an appendage. It is the most superior and posterior portion of the heart, and is obscured anteriorly by the pulmonary trunk and ascending aorta. It lies mostly to the right of the left ventricle.

The left atrium is separated from the right atrium by the interatrialintertribal septum, with the small depression, the fossa ovale, at the site of the closed foramen ovale. It is smaller by volume than the right atrium but with thicker walls.

The left atrial appendage is long and narrow, curving anteriorly from the left around the pulmonary trunk, overlying part of the left coronary artery. Its inner surface is lined by the small pectinate muscles, unlike the main cavity which has smooth walls.

Blood enters on either side via four pulmonary veins, the left and right superior and inferior, and exits via the left atrioventricular opening through the mitral valve, into the left ventricle. The mitral valve is bicuspid with anterior and posterior leaflets supported by the left atrium.

Blood supply

Arterial supply:

Venous drainage:

  • great cardiac vein: drains into the left side of coronary sinus, and on into the right atrium
  • oblique vein of left atrium: drains into the coronary sinus (also known as oblique vein of Marshall) and is not present in all patients

Variant anatomy

  • accessory left atrial appendage: common variant in which small diverticular structure is seen on the superior right side
  • left atrial diverticulum: a pouch-like diverticulum, differentiated from accessory atrial appendage by this smooth shape suggesting a lack of pectinate muscles

Practical points

The interatrial septum may be difficult to identify on CT. This is especially true of the fossa ovalis, being even thinner, which may be unidentifiable and mistaken as an atrial septal defect.

The junction of the left atrial appendage and left superior pulmonary vein forms a muscular ridge. This ridge varies in size and may be large and pronounced, and thus mistaken for a pedunculated mass or thrombus in the left lateral wall.

The left atrium lies directly in front of the oesophagus and is therefore an appropriate window for trans-oesophageal echocardiography.

Development

In the foetal heart, the left and right atria communicate via the foramen ovale in the interatrial septum. Both atria develop from a single primitive atrium. The only remnant of this in the left atrium is the atrial appendage. The smooth-walled main cavity of the left atrium develops from the pulmonary veins.

Related pathology

  • -<p>The <strong>left atrium</strong> is one of the four chambers of the <a href="/articles/heart">heart</a>. It receives oxygenated blood from the pulmonary circulation that is then delivered to the <a href="/articles/left-ventricle">left ventricle</a> and then into the systemic circulation.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The left atrium is grossly cuboidal, and like the <a href="/articles/right-atrium">right atrium</a> has an appendage. It is the most superior and posterior portion of the heart, and is obscured anteriorly by the <a href="/articles/pulmonary-trunk">pulmonary trunk</a> and <a href="/articles/ascending-aorta">ascending aorta</a>. It lies mostly to the right of the left ventricle.</p><p>The left atrium is separated from the right atrium by the interatrial septum. It is smaller by volume than the right atrium but with thicker walls.</p><p>The <a href="/articles/left-atrial-appendage">left atrial appendage</a> is long and narrow, curving anteriorly from the left around the pulmonary trunk, overlying part of the left coronary artery. Its inner surface is lined by the small pectinate muscles, unlike the main cavity which has smooth walls.</p><p>Blood enters on either side via four <a href="/articles/pulmonary-veins">pulmonary veins</a>, the left and right superior and inferior, and exits via the left atrioventricular opening through the <a href="/articles/mitral-valve">mitral valve</a>, into the left ventricle. The mitral valve is bicuspid with anterior and posterior leaflets supported by the left atrium.</p><h4>Blood supply</h4><p>Arterial supply:</p><ul><li>
  • +<p>The <strong>left atrium</strong> is one of the four chambers of the <a href="/articles/heart">heart</a>. It receives oxygenated blood from the pulmonary circulation that is then delivered to the <a href="/articles/left-ventricle">left ventricle</a> and then into the systemic circulation.</p><h4>Gross anatomy</h4><p>The left atrium is grossly cuboidal, and like the <a href="/articles/right-atrium">right atrium</a> has an appendage. It is the most superior and posterior portion of the heart, and is obscured anteriorly by the <a href="/articles/pulmonary-trunk">pulmonary trunk</a> and <a href="/articles/ascending-aorta">ascending aorta</a>. It lies mostly to the right of the left ventricle.</p><p>The left atrium is separated from the right atrium by the <a title="interatrial septum" href="/articles/interatrial-septum">intertribal septum</a>, with the small depression, the <a title="Fossa ovale" href="/articles/fossa-ovale">fossa ovale</a>, at the site of the closed <a title="Foramen ovale (cardiac)" href="/articles/foramen-ovale-cardiac-1">foramen ovale</a>. It is smaller by volume than the right atrium but with thicker walls.</p><p>The <a href="/articles/left-atrial-appendage">left atrial appendage</a> is long and narrow, curving anteriorly from the left around the pulmonary trunk, overlying part of the left coronary artery. Its inner surface is lined by the small pectinate muscles, unlike the main cavity which has smooth walls.</p><p>Blood enters on either side via four <a href="/articles/pulmonary-veins">pulmonary veins</a>, the left and right superior and inferior, and exits via the left atrioventricular opening through the <a href="/articles/mitral-valve">mitral valve</a>, into the left ventricle. The mitral valve is bicuspid with anterior and posterior leaflets supported by the left atrium.</p><h4>Blood supply</h4><p>Arterial supply:</p><ul><li>

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