The atrioventricular sulcus or groove is where the right coronary artery lies. It is between the right atrium and the right ventricle.
the right interventricular sulcus I think it is atrioventricular sulus
Coronary sulcus
The Coronary Sinus
I believe it is the same as the coronary sulcus, or at least the coronary sulcus is one of the two AV sulci. If i am correct than it is the groove on the outside of heart, in which, the circumflex artery lies.
The function of the coronary sulcus is to ultimately transfer blood between the cardiac muscles. The coronary sulcus is located between the ventricles and the atria. Reference: medical-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com
Anterior and posterior interventricular/longitudinal sulci (singular sulcus).
If you're referring to the cortex of bone, that would be trabeculae.
it runsSuperiorand laterally to seperate the temporal lobe from the frontal and the parietal lobes
You have motor area in front of the central sulcus. You have sensory area behind the central sulcus. So in this type of bleeding the sensory area is not affected.
These sulci contain arteries and veins that carry blood to and from cardiac muscle.
They are called sulci (plural of sulcus).
The answer is sulcus.