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sístole

Sístole (systole) is the phase of the cardiac cycle during which the heart muscle contracts and blood is ejected from the ventricles into the aorta and pulmonary artery. It follows diastole and, together with diastole, forms the cardiac cycle. The term is often paired with its English equivalent, systole, and is contrasted with diastole, the filling phase.

Two components are commonly described: atrial systole and ventricular systole. Atrial systole contributes to ventricular filling

Physiologically, systolic events are reflected in arterial pressure as the systolic blood pressure, the peak pressure

Clinical relevance includes conditions affecting systolic function, such as systolic heart failure, where contraction is reduced,

by
contracting
the
atria
near
the
end
of
diastole.
Ventricular
systole
is
the
main
phase
of
blood
ejection,
beginning
after
the
atrioventricular
valves
close
and
ending
with
the
closure
of
the
semilunar
valves.
During
ventricular
systole,
the
heart
passes
through
an
isovolumetric
contraction
phase,
when
pressures
rise
but
all
valves
are
closed,
followed
by
the
ejection
phase
as
the
semilunar
valves
open.
during
this
phase.
The
duration
of
systole
is
typically
about
0.3
seconds
in
a
healthy
adult
at
rest,
representing
roughly
one
third
of
the
cardiac
cycle;
the
remaining
time
is
diastole,
which
lengthens
at
lower
heart
rates
and
shortens
as
heart
rate
increases.
Electrical
activity
correlates
with
systole:
ventricular
depolarization
(the
QRS
complex
on
the
electrocardiogram)
precedes
the
onset
of
ventricular
systole.
and
systemic
or
pulmonary
systolic
hypertension,
where
peak
pressures
are
elevated.
Measurements
include
ejection
fraction,
stroke
volume,
and
noninvasive
blood
pressure
monitoring
to
assess
systolic
performance.