Cardiac opening
cardiac opening
cardiac opening n.
The opening of the esophagus into the stomach.
Historical Examples
    The orifice by which the food enters is called the cardiac opening, because it is near the heart.
    A Practical Physiology Albert F. Blaisdell
    The œsophagus passes through the diaphragm about an inch above the cardiac opening of the stomach.
    Manual of Surgery Volume Second: Extremities–Head–Neck. Sixth Edition. Alexander Miles
Read Also:
- Cardiac-output  blood volume in liters pumped by the left ventricle of the heart per minute. cardiac output The volume of blood pumped per minute by each ventricle of the heart. Cardiac output is equal to the stroke volume (the amount of blood pumped from a ventricle in a single heartbeat) times the heart rate. It is […] 
- Cardiac plexus  cardiac plexus cardiac plexus n. A wide-meshed network of anastomosing cords from the sympathetic and vagus nerves that surrounds the arch of the aorta and the pulmonary artery and continues to the atria, ventricles, and coronary vessels. Historical Examples At the cardiac plexus, there in the center of the breast, we have now a new […] 
- Cardiac reserve  cardiac reserve cardiac reserve n. The work that the heart is able to perform beyond that required of it under ordinary circumstances. 
- Cardiac souffle  cardiac souffle cardiac souffle n. A soft puffing heart murmur. 
- Cardiac sound  cardiac sound cardiac sound n. See heart sound. 
