Sheep Heart Dissection
Sheep Heart Dissection
Purpose
To review the structural characteristics of the human heart and to examine the major features of a mammalian heart.
Materials
Preserved sheep heart Dissecting pan Tweezers
Dropper Scalpel Gloves (if desired)
Red food color Probe
Blue food color Scissors
2. Read through the analysis questions on your lab report as you should be answering them as a groups as you dissect
the sheep heart.
2. Locate the aorta on the superior surface of the heart. Fill your dropper half way with RED food coloring. Insert your
dropper into the aorta and inject the food coloring.
3. Locate the pulmonary artery on the superior surface of the heart. Fill your dropper half way with BLUE food coloring.
Insert your dropper into the pulmonary artery and inject the food coloring.
4. Place the heart in a dissecting tray with its anterior surface up (See Figure 1 below). Locate the interventricular sulcus
and label it with a solid black line. Have Mrs. Chevalier check to make sure you have labeled this correctly.
a. Locate the visceral pericardium, which appears as a thin, transparent layer on the surface of the
heart. Use a scalpel to remove a portion of
this layer and expose the myocardium beneath.
Also note the abundance of fat along the paths
of various blood vessels. This adipose tissue
occurs in the loose connective tissue that
underlies the visceral pericardium.
7. Flip the heart onto its other side so that the left ventricle is resting on your dissection tray and the apex of the heart is
pointed away from you. The anterior side of the heart should be on your right and the posterior side of the heart
should be on your left. Make a “mock” incision bisecting the anterior and posterior sides of the heart. Have Mrs.
Chevalier check your “mock” incisions before making any cuts.
8. Once both of your “mock” incision have been checked, carefully cut into the heart. You want to penetrate
the entire depth of the heart wall, but no further.
9. Open the right atrium. There are three vessels that enter
the right atrium: the superior vena cava, the inferior vena
cava, and the coronary sinus.
a. Place your probe through each of the three vessels
to see where blood enters the heart.
c. Use your probe to trace the flow of blood through the aorta. If you correctly identified this at the beginning
of the lab, this should be died RED.
d. Compare the thickness of the aortic wall with that of the pulmonary trunk.
13. Place your heart and all of the chunks back into the bag the heart came in. Place the bag in the trash.
Names ___________________________
Period _____
Please label the diagram of the human heart below.
1
2 1___________________________________
9 2. __________________________________
3. __________________________________
3
4. __________________________________
10
5. __________________________________
5 11
6. __________________________________
12
4 7. __________________________________
8. __________________________________
13 9. __________________________________
6 10. _________________________________
14
11. _________________________________
12. _________________________________
7
13. _________________________________
8
14. _________________________________
15 15. _________________________________
Analysis Questions
1. How can you tell which side of the heart is the anterior surface and which side is the posterior surface?
2. How many chambers are found in the mammalian heart? List these chambers in the order in which blood
flows through them.
6. How do the walls of the atria compare with the walls of the ventricles and why are they different?
7. How do the walls of the right ventricle compare with the walls of the left ventricle? Why are they different?
9. Name and compare the heart valves found between the upper & lower chambers of the right and left sides
of the heart.
10. Vessels that carry blood away from the heart are called ___________________, while _________________
carry blood toward the heart.
12. What is the purpose of the coronary artery and what results if there is blockage in this vessel?
14. Using words, trace blood flow through the major blood vessels and heart, starting with deoxygenated
blood returned from the body.