6A - Control of heart rate Flashcards
What controls the regular beating of the heart?
Cardiac muscle.
What does it mean that the heart is myogenic?
It can contract and relax without receiving signals from nerves - this pattern of contractions controls the regular heartbeat.
How is heart rate controlled?
1) SAN in wall of RA sends out regular waves of electrical activity (excitation) to the atrial walls.
2) This causes the atria to contract at the same time.
3) Waves transferred from SAN to AVN (atrioventricular node).
4) Slight delay at AVN before electrical impulse is passed onto the bundle of His.
5) Bundle of His is a group of muscle fibres responsible for conducting the waves of excitation between the ventricles to the apex (bottom) of the heart. The bundle splits into finer muscle fibres in the right and left ventricle walls called the Purkinye tissue.
6) The Purkinye tissue carries the wave of excitation into the muscular walls of the right and left ventricles, causing them to contract simultaneously, from the bottom up.
What does the sinoatrial node do?
Sends out regular waves of electrical activity (excitation) to the atrial walls.
It is like a pacemaker setting the rhythm of the heartbeat.
Why can’t the wave of excitation be passed straight from the atria to the ventricles?
Because a band of non-conducting collagen tissue (atrioventricular septum) prevents this.
Why does the AVN delay the transmission of the impulse to the bundle of His?
To make sure the atria have emptied before the ventricles contract.
How do the ventricles contract?
From the bottom (apex) up.
What branch of the nervous system does control of heart rate involve?
Autonomic.
What does the SAN do?
Generates electrical impulses that cause the cardiac muscles to contract.
The rate at which the SAN fires is controlled by what?
Unconsciously by a part of the brain called the medulla oblongata.
Why do animals need to alter their heart rate?
To respond to internal stimuli, e.g. to prevent fainting due to low blood pressure or to make sure the heart rate is high enough to supply the body with enough oxygen.
What are stimuli in the blood detected by?
Pressure receptors and chemical receptors.
What are the pressure receptors called?
Baroreceptors.
What are baroreceptors?
Pressure receptors.
Where are baroreceptors?
Aorta and carotid arteries.