17. Blood Vessels + The Cardiac Cycle Flashcards
What are the structural differences of arteries and veins?
Arteries have thick elastic tunica media while veins have approx equal media and external.
Veins have valves
Which vessels are known as resistance vessels?
Arterioles
What are the two types of venules?
Post capillary (smallest, very porous) and muscular (no exchange, thicker walls)
How is cardiac output defined?
Strove volume x Heart rate
Volume of blood ejected by one ventricle in 1 minute
What are the important rules of the cardiac cycle?
Atria contract, followed by ventricles with 0.1 s delay
L and R ventricles eject the same amount of blood
Each beat takes ~0.85s
What is the purpose of the annulus fibrosis?
It is an electrical insulator to prevent the passage of electric signal from the atria to the ventricles - must travel through bundle branches in heart walls
What does the PQRST wave represent?
P wave - atrial depolarisation
QRS complex - ventricular depolarisation (begins at apex) and atrial reploarisation
T wave - ventricular repolarisation
How long is each stage of the cardiac cycle?
Ventricular filling - 0.5s
Isovolumetric contraction - 0.05s
Ejection - 0.3s
Isovolumetric relaxation - 0.08s
What is the typical end diastolic volume?
120 mL
What causes the closing of the AV valves?
When the pressure of the ventricles exceeds the pressure of the atria
How is stroke volume calculated?
2/3 of EDV, amount of blood ejected in one beat. 120*0.66=70-80 mL
In which stage do the semilunar valves open?
Ejection, allow blood into pulmonary circuit and aorta
What is the sinoatrial node?
A collection of my oysters that spontaneously depolarise at regular intervals. The pacemaker of the heart
What is responsible for a nervous change in heart rate?
The rate at which the myocytes depolarise.
Sympathetic NS - increase HR
PS NS - decrease HR
What is responsible for setting the basal heart rate?
The vagus nerve. Allows PS innervation of myocytes, causing decreased rate of depolarisation