Blood is supplied to the heart muscle by its own arteries. These, the coronary arteries stem from the aorta just above the semilunar valves. The coronary arteries have branches supplying the atria, the ventricles and the interventicular septum. There is only minimal overlap in the blood supply of the smaller arteries, so if one artery is clogged, the blood supply of that part of the heart is blocked and the heart muscle gets damaged. This is called a myocardial infarction, or a heart attack. The heart muscle’s capillaries gather into venules as they meet, which then form one large vein that carries the blood to the right atrium.