Cardiac Cycle Flashcards
What is the Sinoatrial node?
A group of cells found in the wall of the right atrium. They spontaneously produce action potentials that travel through the heart via the electrical conduction system
What is the atrioventricular node?
Electrically connected to the right atrium and ventricle delaying impulses so the atria have time to eject their blood into ventricles before ventricular contraction
What are the four phases in a heartbeat?
1- electrical activity generated in the SA node spreads out via gap junctions into the atria
2- at the AV node, conduction is delayed to allow correct filling of ventricles
3- conduction occurs rapidly through bundle of his into ventricles
4- conduction through purkinje fibres spreads quickly through the ventricles
Where does ventricular contraction begin?
At the apex of the heart
What is cardiac diastole?
- Relaxation of all heart muscles
- Blood returns to the heart and begins to fill the atria and ventricles
- Low pressure in the ventricles allow the mitral and tricuspid valves to open and the ventricles to fill with blood
What is atrial systole?
- atrial contraction causes blood to move into relaxed ventricles
- as the ventricles fill, the increase in pressure in the ventricles causes the mitral and tricuspid valve to close
What is ventricular systole?
- the ventricles enter systole and begin contracting
- after a period of isovolumetric contraction, pressure rises sufficiently to force open aortic and pulmonary valves and blood is ejected from the ventricles
What are the steps in a heart beat when related to pressure?
- Contraction of the left atrium pushes blood into the relaxed ventricle. Once the ventricle is full, its pressure rises slightly and the mitral valve closes
- pressure rises during isovolumetric contraction of the ventricle
- when the ventricular pressure is higher than the aorta, the aortic valve is pushed open and blood is ejected from the ventricle
- the ventricle empties and once its pressure is lower than the aorta the aortic valve closes.
What does EDV stand for?
End diastolic volume
What does ESV stand for?
End systole volume
What is the equation that links stroke volume, EDV and ESV?
Stroke volume = EDV-ESV
What are the four heart sounds and when do they happen?
S1- lub (closure of tricuspid/ mitral valves at the beginning of ventricular systole)
S2- dub (closure of aortic/pulmonary valves)
S3- occasional (turbulent blood flow into ventricles, heard near the end of the first 1/3 diastole, especially in older people)
S4- pathological in adults (forced atrial contraction against a stiff ventricle. Not generally heard in young people)