The left and right sides of the
heart are named from a dorsal view, i.e., looking at the heart from the back or from the perspective of the person whose heart it is. There are four chambers in a heart: an atrium (upper) and a ventricle (lower) on both the left and right sides. In
mammals and
birds, blood from the body goes to the
right side of the heart first. Blood enters the upper
right atrium, is pumped down to the
right ventricle and from there to the lungs via the pulmonary artery. Blood going to the lungs is called the
pulmonary circulation. When the blood returns to the heart from the lungs via the pulmonary vein, it goes to the
left side of the heart, entering the upper
left atrium. Blood is then pumped to the lower
left ventricle and from there out of the heart to the body via the aorta. This is called the
systemic circulation. A cardiac shunt is when blood follows a pattern that deviates from the systemic circulation, i.e., from the body to the right atrium, down to the right ventricle, to the lungs, from the lungs to the left atrium, down to the left ventricle and then out of the heart back to the systemic circulation. A left-to-right shunt is when blood from the left side of the heart goes to the right side of the heart. This can occur either through a hole in the ventricular or atrial septum that divides the left and the right heart or through a hole in the walls of the arteries leaving the heart, called
great vessels. Left-to-right shunts occur when the
systolic blood pressure in the left heart is higher than the right heart, which is the normal condition in birds and mammals. ==Congenital shunts in humans==