Cardiac structure and function Flashcards
What are the four layers of the heart and their functions?
- Epicardium (outside layer): connective tissue (areolar)
- Myocardium (middle): cardiomyocytes and connective tissue
- Endocardium (inner layer): thin layer of connective tissue and endothelium
- Pericardium (parietal and visceral (epicardium)) - cavity contains pericardial fluid for lubrication
Pericarditis
Multiple causes (infections, trauma, cancer, autoimmune), overall effect is the accumulation of fluid (effusion) which restricts ventricular filling
Excitation-contraction coupling
- Autorhythmic cells stimulate cardiomyocytes
- AP down sarcolemma
- AP generated by autorhyhmic cells, arrived at cardiomyocytes, is propagated along the sarcolemma into t-tubules
- On membrane are calcium channels (L-type calcium channels)
- As voltage changes, it opens channels and opens extracellular fluid and space
- Ca2+ into cell and increases concentration inside cytosol
- L-type calcium channel closely associated with SR
- SR has 10,000x greater amount of calcium than cytosol
- RyR receptors on membrane of SR - calcium binds to RyR and causes calcium within SR to enter cytosol - this is calcium induced calcium release
- Increase in calcium in intracellular space needed to bind to troponin to cause muscle contraction
Excitation propagation
Somatic neurone terminates at muscle fibres = NMJ
AP travels towards NMJ = vesicles and ACh travel across membrane
Gap junctions
- Occur between cardiomyocytes
- Sharing of cytosol - environment in one cardiomyocyte influences another = transfer of excitation between gap junctions
- Apoptosis can be transmitted across gap junctions - causes wave of cell death
- Autorhythmic cells = excitability, cause AP on first cardiomyocyte
- Propagation of AP along sarcolemma
- Influx of sodium ions causes transfer into adjacent cell
- Voltage gated channels along membrane, causes them to open, causes AP wave = peristaltic process
- Directional flow of blood out of heart
Preload
- Cardiac output = HR x SV
- Stroke volume = (end diastolic volume) - (end systolic volume)
- EDV is the volume of blood just before contraction
- ESV is volume of blood after contraction
- No change in volume of ventricle
Stroke volume
- Physical factors - more optimum myofilament overlapping
- Decrease lattice spacing - decreased distance between myofilaments - increased probability of interaction between contractile components
- Activating factors - increase in calcium sensitivity (multiple mechanisms - increased calcium release and sensitivity)
Length-force relationship
- Shortening = loss of energy, stretch is gained energy
- Increase starting length of muscle means increased net power until optimum
Pressure-volume loop (increase in EDV)
- Increases the overall shortening length - generates more total force/power
- Preload/EDV increases with venous return
- Increase in EDV = increased contractility
- Increases SV and therefore CO
Pressure-volume loop (increased ESV)
- Increase in afterload means increase in EDV because reduction in stroke volume = higher ESV (more left in ventricle after contraction)
- Length of muscle increased so ability of muscle fibres to shorten decreases which means stroke volume decreases
- Increase in afterload alters slops (correlation) between pressure and volume - less opportunity for muscle to shorten - decreased SV if no compensatory response
- Increase in afterload means overall stroke volume decreases for variety of factors
What happens when contractility falls?
- Caused by weak ventricle - it can’t generate force in systole
- Stroke volume will then fall
What happens when compliance falls?
- Stiff fibrotic ventricle
- Reduced compliance
- Reduced SV
Contractility
- Increase in calcium release leads to increase in contractility
- Sympathetic drive due to ventricular muscle fibres (NA at B1 R in cardiac muscle cells)
- Hormonal control (circulating A and NA)
Ejection fraction
- Quantification of contractility: ejection fraction, ratio of stroke volume to EDV
- EF = SV/EDV
- Expressed as a percentage - normally between 55 and 75 percent
- Measures ability of ventricle to contract - >75% indicates hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- <40% = heart failure
Heart rate
- Neuronal and endocrine regulation
- Increase HP - positive chronotropic factors (including A and NA)
- Decrease HP - negative chronotropic response (including ACh)
- Symapthetic increases membrane permeability to Na+ = spontaneous depolarisation = reduces time to depolarise = increases HR
- Parasympathetic decreases permeability to Na+ but increases to K+ = decreased spontaneous depolarisation = increased time to initiate depolarisation