Diastole is when a given chamber of the heart is relaxing. There is atrial diastole and ventricular diastole. Most of the time when talking about diastole we are referring to the ventricular because that is when we measure the diastolic (low) pressure in your systemic arteries, usually the brachial artery.
Systole is the period of heart contraction within the cardiac cycle.
This can be seen by clicing on the link below ( The ventricular systole )
This is called systole. When the heart chambers relax, it is called distole. I hope that this helps you out!
Blood is ejected from the heart during systole.
The ventricles of heart have two states: systole(contraction) and diastole (relaxation). During diastole blood fills the ventricles and during systole the blood is pushed out of the heart into the arteries. The auricles contract anti-phase to the ventricles and chiefly serve to optimally fill the ventricles with blood.http://www.answers.com/systole
systole
The cardiac cycle of the heart has two phases - the diastole phase and systole phase. In the systole phase, the ventricles contract and pump blood into the arteries.
The muscles used to produce a heartbeat are called the "heart."
Contraction of the ventricles and atria is called systole. Relaxation is called diastole.
I think systole is when the heart contracts- the "lub" of the heart- and diastole is when the heart relaxes- the "dub" of the heart. Systole is the numerator of the fraction and diastole is the denominator of the fraction. Ex. 120/80 120 is systole and 80 is diastole
Systole and diastole most often refer to the ventricle of the heart. Systole is contraction of the ventricle, and diastole is the relaxation of the ventricle.
Systole is the period of heart contraction within the cardiac cycle.
This can be seen by clicing on the link below ( The ventricular systole )
diastole and systole diastole and systole
systole.
systole
systole