Cardiology embryo and physio Flashcards
gives rise to :
- smooth parts (outflow tract) or left and right ventricles
- atrial septum, membraneous interventricular septum, (AV and semilunar valves)
- coronary sinus
- inferior vena cava
- trabeculated part of the left and right atria
- smooth part of left atrium
- tracbeculated part of the left and right ventricles
- superior vena cava
- smooth part of the right atrium (sinus venarum)
- ascending aorta and pulmonary trunk
- bulbus cordis
- endocardial cushion
- left horn of sinus venosus
- posterior, subcardinal and supracardinal veins
- primitive atrium
- primitive pulmonary vein
- primitive ventricles
- right common cardinal vein, and right anterior cardinal vein
- right horn of sinus vensous
- truncus arteriosus
primary heart tube loops to establish L-R polarity beginning week 4 of gestation
Defect in L-R Dynein can lead to dextrocardia as seen in kartagener syndrome (primary ciliary dyskinesia)
cardiac looping
what is the process of sepatation of the chambers
atria
- septum primum grows toawrd endocardial cushions, a narrow foramen primum forms
- foramen secundum forms in septum primum (foramen primum disappears)
- septum secundum develops as the foramen secundum maintain R-L shunt
- septum secundum expands and covers most of the foramen and form the foramen ovale
- remaining portion of the septum primum forms valve of the foramen ovale
- septum secundum and septum primum fuse to form the atrial septum
- foramen ovale usually closes soon after birth because of increase LA and decrease RA pressure
what happens when the septum primum and septum secundum fails to fuse after birth?
patent foramen ovale- if left untreated can lead to paradoxical emboli (venous thromboemboli that enter systemic arterial circulation) similar to those resulting from the ASD.
ventricles
- muscular interventricular septum forms to form the opening of the interventricular foramen
- aorticopulmonary septum rotates and fuse with muscular ventricular septum to form the membranous interventricular septum, closing the interventricular foramen
- growth of endocardial cushion separates atria from ventricles
what is the most common congenital cardiac anomaly that occur int he membranous septum?
ventricular septal defect
- what forms the ascending aorta and pulmonary trunk?
- what fuses to form that?
- what structures migrate to form that?
- aorticopulmonary septum
- truncal and bulbar ridges
- neural crest and endocardial cushion
- aortic/ pulmonary valves derived from?
- mitral/tricuspid: derived from what?
- endocardial cushions of outflow tract
- fused endocardial cushions of AV canal
what is the process of fetal circulation?
remember umbilical vein carries oxygenated blood and umbilical arteries carried deoxygenated blood.
- blood enters fetus through umbilical vein conducted via ductus venosus into the IVC to bypass the hepatic circulation
- high oxygenated blood that reaches the heart via IVC is directed by the foramen ovale
- deoxygenated blood from SVC pass through the RA–> RV–> main pulmonary artery –> ductus arteriosus–> descending aorta due to high pulmonary artery resistance
what happens are birth that changes every?
infant takes breath leading to reduced resistance in pulmonary vasculature –> increase left atrial pressure compared to RA pressure–> foramen ovale closes (now called fossa ovalis).
the increase O2 and decrease prostaglandins (from the placental separation) –> closure of the ductus arteriosus
- indomethacin helps PDA –> ligamentum arteriosum
- prostaglandiss E1 and E2 keeps the PDA open
fetal structures
- allantois–> urachus
- ductus arteriosus
- ductus venosus
- foramen ovale
- notochord
- umbilical arteries
- umbilical vein
post-natal derivates
- median umbilical ligament
- note: urachus is part of the allantoic duct between bladder and umbilicus - ligamentum arteriosum
- note: near the left recurrent largyneal nerve - ligamentum venosum
- fossa ovalis
- nucleus pulposus
- medial umbilical ligaments
- ligamentum teres hepatis (round ligament)
- note: contained in falciform ligament
- what is the most most posterior part of the heart?
- enlargement can causes dysphagia (due to compression of the esophagus) or horseness (compression of the left recurrent (a branch of the vagus nerve))
- which chamber is the most anterior part of the heart making it prone to injury and trauma?
- LA
- RV
3 layers of the heart (from outer to inner)
- fibrous pericardium
- parietal layer of the serous pericardium
- visceral layer of the serous pericardium
pericardial cavity is between the parietal and viceral layer
1. which nerve innverate the pericardium?
2. where does pericarditis referred pain to?
- phrenic nerve
- pericarditis referred pain to the neck, arms, and one or both shoulders (often the left)
LAD-and its branches supply the anterior 2/3 of the interventricular septum, anteriolateral papillary, anterior surface of the LV and most commonly occluded
PDA- supplies AV nodes (dependent on dominance), 1/3 of interventricular septum and posterior 1/3 of the ventricle wall. supplies posteriomedial papillary muscles
-right marginal artery supplies RV
RCA- supplies SA node (independent of dominance). infarct may cause nodal dysfucntion (bradycardia or heart block)
describe the dominance
right dominance circulation (85%) = PDA arises from RCA
Left-dominant circulation (8%) = PDA arises from LCX
codominant circulation (7%)= PDA arises from LCX an RCA
coronary flow peaks during diastole
- which volume is affected by contractility, afterload and preload?
- what causes answer volume in terms of these variables?
- what happens during heart failure?
- stroke volume
- increased contractility, increased preload, decrease afterload
- decreased SV
catecholamines stimulate beta-recetors –> calcium channels get phosphorylated–> increase calcium entry–> Ca induce more Ca release from sarcoplasmic reticulum
phospholamban phosphorylation activate Ca ATPase to increase Ca storage in SR
-
phospholamban is an inhibitor of cardiac muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca++-ATPase (SERCA2) which transports calcium from cytosol into the sarcoplasmic reticulum. When phosphorylated (by PKA) - disinhibition of Ca++-ATPase of SR leads to faster Ca++ uptake into the sarcoplasmic reticulum
- increase intracellular Ca
- decrease intracellular Na (decrease activity of Na/Ca exchanger)
what does digitalis do?
which factors can decrease contractility?
digitalis- block Na/K pump to increase Na intracellularly leading to decrease Na/Ca exchanger–> increase intracellular Ca
factors decreases contractility
B1-blackers
HF with systolic dusfunction
acidosis
hypoxia/hypercapnia
non-dihydropyridine Ca channel blockers
preload determined by ventricular EDV and depends on venous tone and circulating blood
what drugs can decrease preload?
venous vasodilator (nitroglycerin)
afterload approximated by MAP
increase afterload–> increase pressure–> increase wall tension per Laplace’s law
1. How does the LV compensate for the increased afterload?
2. which drugs decrease afterload?
- the LV hypertrophy to decrease the wall tension
2. arterial vasodilator (hydralazine) decreases afterload
ACE inhibitor and ARB decrease both preload and afterload
chronic HTN (MAP) –> LV hypertrophy