Left.
Entering the left chest and exiting the right chest, a bullet would probably pass through both lungs, and may also pass through the heart.
Pressure on the chest can indicate cardiac/heart problems. Chest 'pain' is not necessarily felt as 'pain' but can be described as tightness or pressure on the chest and can radiate to the neck, jaw, arm ( especially left arm) or back. It can also be accompanied with sweating and nausea. This can be caused by lack of oxygen to the heart and lead to a heart attack. Chest pressure caused be lack of oxygen can be noticed with activity and then relieved with rest. This is something that can be very serious and needs to be evaluated by a physician right away.
The heart is composed of four chambers - ONE of each: right atrium, RIGHT VENTRICLE, left atrium and left ventricle.
your chest is a chest, its nothing more or less than a chest. chests eat chests because they are chests. a chest is a chest nothing more or less than a chest.
The four-chambered pig heart has two atria (left and right) and two ventricles (left and right).
It isn't. In almost everyone, the heart is on the left side of the chest. On a chest x-ray, however, the heart is on the right-hand side of the picture because that is where the patient's left is! It is as if the patient is standing in front of you, facing you... their right is on your left and their left is on your right.
No its actually in the middle if your chest :)
It is on your left side. When you say the Pledge of Allegiance (in America) you place your right hand across your chest over your heart on the left-center of your chest. In anatomical descriptions, right and left are from the perspective of the patient, e g "my right shoulder hurts".
The left ventricle and the right ventricle. In a human, the heart is tilted in such a way that the right ventricle is closer to the chest, and the left ventricle is behind it.
Because the heart was developed from tissues that makes it go to the left side.
Could be a heart attack, esp if you have situs inversus (heart and great vessels on the right side of the chest instead of left--RARE). If you have ever had a chest Xray, they should have told you if your heart's on the right.
Entering the left chest and exiting the right chest, a bullet would probably pass through both lungs, and may also pass through the heart.
Left side^Answer1It is actually in the middle of the chest but you can feel the pulse on the left side.^My AnswerThe heart is located in the center of the chest. People think that it is in the left side of the chest, but in reality it is in the center - it is tilted slightly to the left - and the left side generates more pressure - hence the thinking that it is left side.
the heart is in the same position in both males & females...it lies beneath the left breast-approximately.
NO. Here's how to find your heart: with your finer, find the bottom of your sternum (the flat bone in the middle of your chest that's connected to your ribs). Move your finger about two inches to the left; this is where the bulk of your heart is. The top of your heart IS in the middle of your chest, but it tilts towards your left hip.
no, it is in the middle of your chest
The heart is situated in the mediastinum, which is a space between the lungs in the approximate center of your chest behind your breastbone. The heart is actually located more to the left, though, and so the reason you'll feel it beat harder on the left side is because that's where it is. There are, however, congenital birth defects in which the heart is found on the right side of the chest. This is a rare case and the average human will have his/her heart situated more toward the left.