Let’s imagine that organs can be perfectly grown in a lab and installed into a body without any chance of rejection or other complications usually associated with organ transplant.

You, a perfectly healthy adult human, go to the doctor and have them put a second heart in your chest that is connected to the circulatory system with your original heart.

What would be the effects of this? Could it even be done in this hypothetical situation at all?

  • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    It’s better, which is why we already do.

    Mammals have a double circulatory system, with the left and right ventricles effectively acting as separate hearts that happen to be physically connected.

    • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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      5 days ago

      Citation needed. The junctions in cardiac cells make electrical signals propagate through them all, so acting independently isn’t something that’s normal. There’s two loops, but one pump. It’s a single system.

      • AbouBenAdhem@lemmy.world
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        5 days ago

        Even if they were physically separated you’d want them to pump in sync, to maximize the pressure. So having them share electrical signals is just the optimal setup for two hearts.

      • FistingEnthusiast@lemmynsfw.com
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        5 days ago

        You’re being needlessly pedantic

        The reality is that they’re two hearts

        If they were to be carefully separated, but with the SA & AV nodes still connected somehow (ignoring the fact that the Perkinje fibres and bundle of hiss can also act as pacemakers), you’d have two separate hearts doing their thing

        • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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          5 days ago

          But if the nodes are connected, it’s still a single pump.

          You’re merely choosing to redefine the terms. The nodes are part of the heart as a system - remove the nodes and well, the pump no longer pumps.

          Your argument is like saying you can split a multi-cylinder automotive engine in half, leave the ignition system in place, and you have 2 engines.

          No, you have one engine split in two, with it’s electrical timing system still determining how each cylinder maintains the exact same timing as before.

          (Automotive engines are essentially air pumps with very specific timining mechanisms, as each cylinder’s output affects other cylinders, akin to the timing in a heart).