The four valves of the heart allow blood into the heart and prevent it from flowing in the wrong direction. The valves open or close each time the heart beats. This ensures the body always has a sufficient blood supply, and the blood is moving as it should.

The four heart valves are:

  • the mitral valve
  • the aortic valve
  • the tricuspid valve
  • the pulmonic valve

Doctors call the mitral and tricuspid valves the atrioventricular valves, and the aortic and pulmonic valves the semilunar valves.

Keep reading to learn more about each of the four heart valves.

What is the purpose of the heart valves
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In a healthy heart, blood flows in only one direction. The valves close off parts of the heart, preventing the blood from flowing backward.

  1. The process begins when oxygen-depleted blood (from the arms, legs, body, and head) enters the right atrium. This is the upper chamber on the right side of the heart and is the storage chamber.
  2. The blood then flows through the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle, which is the lower right pumping chamber.
  3. The ventricle pumps this blood through the pulmonary valve to the pulmonary artery, where it enters the lungs for oxygenation.
  4. Oxygen-rich blood re-enters the heart through the left atrium, which is the upper left chamber.
  5. It then flows through the mitral valve to the left ventricle, or the left pumping chamber.
  6. Finally, it moves through the aortic valve and then through the aorta to the rest of the body.

The four heart valves all have a role in ensuring that the blood can only flow in one direction. The four heart valves are:

Tricuspid valve

The tricuspid valve is named because it has three flaps called cusps, or leaflets. Blood flows through this valve after leaving the right atrium. After passing through the tricuspid valve, blood flows to the right ventricle.

People with a rare disorder called tricuspid atresia are born without a tricuspid valve. Tricuspid atresia means that blood cannot flow from the right atrium to the right ventricle.

Tricuspid regurgitation means that this valve cannot fully close, while tricuspid stenosis causes the valve to thicken, narrowing its opening.