Cardiology Flashcards
How does the cardiovascular system relate to the electrical system?
Heart -> Generator -> producing a voltage which is the driving force of blood (produces blood pressure
Blood vessels -> are the electrical wires which conduct the electricity or blood from and to the heart
Blood -> The electrons which carry the electricity/ nutrients, waste, hormones and clotting proteins
What is the function of the cardiovascular system?
Transport substances
- *Oxygen and nutrients** to cells
- *Wastes** from the cells to the liver and kidneys
Hormones, immune cells, and clotting proteins to specific target cells.
Why is high blood pressure so dangerous and straining on the heart?
- The heart has to work harder to overcome the high pressure at the extremities to compensate so the heart hypertrophies (Enlarged heart) to supply enough blood to the extremities.
- Because the diameter of the left ventricle is bigger it is unable to produce enough pressure (larger diameter, less pressure). RESISTANCE!!!
- Pressure in the aorta needs to reach a high enough pressure to open the valve and if the pressure around the body is higher than what the heart can produce the valve will not open.
Heart cannot keep up with the pressure
Where is the location of the lowest pressure in the cardiovascular system/ body?
Veins
Think pressure gradient
They have the lowest pressure because in order to accept blood they need to have a lower pressure
A substance will move from an area of high pressure to low pressure most readily
What are venules?
Small converging vessels from the tissues will be full of CO2 as this is depleted blood leaving the tissues
They dump blood into the veins
What are veins?
These are relatively large low-pressure vessels that converge and carry blood to the heart
What are the two paths of blood flow through the heart and vasculature?
Series (through the cardiovascular system)
Parallel ( within the systemic or pulmonary circuit
What are the two circuits in series flow?
Pulmonary circuit
Systemic circuit
What is the pulmonary circuit?
Blood supplied by the right side of the heart to the lungs via the pulmonary arteries and from the lungs to the heart via the pulmonary veins
What is the systemic circuit?
The blood leaves the left side of the heart and the blood vessels from the heart go to systemic tissues
Depleted blood is taken from the tissues to the heart
What does series or parallel blood flow take into consideration?
Series blood flow is more of the general route that the blood has to take as it circulates the body. It assumes the blood is only going in one path.
Parallel blood flow takes into consideration the blood flow to the organs as the organs are in parallel so they can receive the same blood flow.
What are the two places in circulation that gas exchange take place?
In the lungs as the blood entering the lungs is oxygenated as gas diffuses from the alveolar sacs into the blood
In the systemic capillaries as the oxygenated blood passes in the capillary beds near to the tissues the gases diffuse to the tissues leaving depleted
How does the heart receive blood?
Coronary circulation
It is supplied by coronary arteries that derive from the base of the aorta and take blood that pools back into the aortic cusps to supply the heart with FRESH oxygenated blood.
Deoxygenated blood will then be returned back to the right atrium via the coronary sinus
Where is the heart located?
Thoracic cavity in the mediastinum
What separates the thoracic cavity from the abdominal cavity?
Diaphragm
What is the pericardium?
This is a serous membrane that surrounds the heart and provides protection from other organs
It is lubricated so the heart can beat without friction.
What is pericarditis?
Inflammation of the pericardium
It can cause fluid to build up around the heart and make the heart need to work harder to overcome the pressure
What are three layers of the heart wall?
Epicardium (outer external membrane)
Myocardium (middle cardiac muscle)
Endothelium (inner layer of simple squamous endothelial cells)
What drives blood flow?
Pressure difference drives all blood flow throughout the body as the blood needs the necessary push to get it where ti needs to go without damaging the organs at the end.
Does each chamber of the heart produce pressure equally?
No
The right ventricle produces less pressure than the left ventricle because its just pumping blood to the lungs whereas the left ventricle is sending blood systemically.
The atria are under less pressure because they are simple pumping blood to the ventricles
How do all valves open?
Passively based on a pressure gradient
If the pressure on the upper side of the valve is higher than that of the side below the blood will not be able to go up through the valve