Cardiac Physiology Flashcards
aerobic requirements of the heart
- cardiac tissue is metabolically very active
- cardiac energy needs can increase 9x from rest to heavy exercise
- O2 extraction from the blood remains fairly constant regardless of work load
- Blood flow increases from 80 ml to 400 ml/min/100g tissue
describe cardiac myocyte structure
- y-shaped cells
- striated
- contain a single nuclei
- limited ability to replicate
- linked together by intercalated disks
- lack of distinct fiber types
- do not fatigue
- all fibers contract with each beat
- provide graded muscle contractions
describe cardiac myocyte force production
- all cardiac muscle cells contract regardless of HR and contractility
- cardiac muscle cells regulate their force production by regulating availability of calcium to their sarcomeric proteins
Describe the steps in a cardiac action potential
- resting membrane at -90mV, all channels but K+ are closed
- rapid Na influx through open fast Na channels results in rapid increase to >0
- transient K+ channels open and K+ efflux returns TMP to 0mV
- Influx of Ca through L-type Ca channels is electrically balanced by K+ efflux, through delayed rectifier K+ channels
- Ca channels close by delayed rectifier K+ channels remain open and return TMP to -90mV

compare the time of a skeletal muscle AP to a cardiac muscle AP
- skeletal → 4-8 ms
- cardiac → 100-300 ms
what are refractory periods?
periods of time in which cardiac muscles allow complete emptying of the ventricles prior to next contraction
list the refractory periods
- ARP (absolute refractory period)
- ERP (effective refractory period)
- RRP (relative refractory period)
how is SV calculated?
LVEDV - LVESV
how is EF calculated?
(LVEDV - LVESV)/LVEDV * 100
define the relative norm values for various cardiac values like EDV, ESV, SV, and EF
- EDV → 110-120 mls
- ESV → 40-50 mls
- SV → ~70 mls
- EF → 60% is WNL
T/F: changing EDV or ESV does not impact SV
FALSE
changing either will result in a change to SV
T/F: Atrial failure is often unnoticed
TRUE
but with A-Fib on the other hand, the atria contract to frequently which reduces the amount of blood flowing to the ventricles
describe the process of filling the ventricles
- substantial filling of the ventricles occurs during the first 1/3 of ventricular diastole
- middle 1/3 of ventricle diastole there is a modest amount of blood entering the ventricles
- during the last 1/3 the “tank is topped off” via the atrial contraction
T/F: there is a substantial change in volume during a isovolumetric ventricular contraction?
FALSE
short (0.02 - 0.03 seconds)
all valves are shut and pressure is building but no volume loss/change
when does ventricular contraction shift from isovolumetric to an ejection contraction?
once the LV SP >80 mmHg (in a normatensive pt)
rapid ejection → 70% occurs in first 1/3 of systole
what is isovolumetric diastolic or relaxation of the LV?
this is when ventricular pressure < aortic pressure and thus the aortic valve closes and remains closed resulting in no net blood flow
- early part of ventricular relaxation
- LV pressure is decreasing
- both aortic and AV valves are closed
- AV valves open when atrial pressure is greater than that of the ventricles
what does an elevated RV pressure suggest?
- pulmonary HTN
- RV failure
- CHF
- increased blood volume
list the pulmonary pressures
- systolic → 20-30 mmHg
- diastolic → 8-12 mmHg
- mean pulmonary pressure → 25 mmHg
what allows the pulmonary ciruculation to function as a low pressure system?
- RV pumps through a shorter length of pipe
- pulmonary vasculature is more compliant
- lower resistance to bloow flow
- vessels walls are thinner and contain less muscle
- expansion of lungs result in vascular dilation
- much lower impact of gravity
- benefit-reduced risk of pulmonary edema
List clinical markers of cardiac function and how to determine them
- Cardiac output
- CO = HR * SV
- ~4-8 L/min
- EF (LVEF)
- norm ~55-70%
- Cardiac Index
- ratio of CO to body surface area
- CO/BSA
- units = L/min/m2
- norm → 2.5-4
what EF is indicative of heart failure?
<40%
List determinants of cardiac performance as defined by CO
- HR
- Contractility
- Preload
- Afterload
what is contractility and how does it impact cardiac performance?
strength of contraction/force production
- if increased → increase in CO
- if decreased → decrease in CO
how is preload a determinant of cardiac performance?
it reflects the amount of venous return which impacts how much myocardial distension occurs prior to contraction
Frank-Starling mechanism