Cardiovascular Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

What is the pathophysiology of atherosclerosis?

A
  1. Endothelial dysfunction - alcohol / smoking
  2. Proliferation leading to pro-inflammatory, pro-oxidant, proliferative and reduced nitric oxide bioavailability
  3. Fatty infiltration of the subendothelial space by low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles
  4. Monocyte migration –> differentiate into macrophages –> digest LDL –> foam cells
  5. Foam cell death –> increased inflammation
  6. Smooth muscle proliferation and migration from the tunica media into the intima results in formation of a fibrous capsule covering the fatty plaque.
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2
Q

How is ANP secreted?

A

Myocytes of right atrium and ventricle in response to increased blood volume

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3
Q

What is the action of ANP?

A

Natriuretic, i.e. promotes excretion of sodium
Lowers BP
Antagonises actions of angiotensin II, aldosterone

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4
Q

What are the stages of the cardiac action potential?

A

0 Rapid depolarisation Rapid sodium influx
1 Early repolarisation Efflux of potassium
2 Plateau Slow influx of calcium
3 Final repolarisation Efflux of potassium
4 Restoration of ionic concentrations

Resting potential is restored by Na+/K+ ATPase

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5
Q

At resting ionic concentration what is happening to cardiac muscle cells?

A

There is slow entry of Na+ into the cell decreasing the potential difference until the threshold potential is reached, triggering a new action potential

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5
Q

At resting ionic concentration what is happening to cardiac muscle cells?

A

There is slow entry of Na+ into the cell decreasing the potential difference until the threshold potential is reached, triggering a new action potential

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6
Q

At what speed is the action potential conducted over the atria?

A

1 m/second

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7
Q

At what speed is the action potential conducted through the AV node?

A

0.05 m/second

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8
Q

What is the fastest conducting part of the heart?

A

Purkinje fibres are of large diameter and achieve velocities of 2-4 m/sec, the fastest conduction in the heart.

This allows a rapid and coordinated contraction of the ventricles

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9
Q

How do you calculate the left ventricle ejection volume?

A

Left ventricular ejection fraction = (stroke volume / end diastolic LV volume ) * 100%

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10
Q

How do you calculate the stroke volume?

A

Stroke volume = end diastolic LV volume - end systolic LV volume

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11
Q

How do you calculate the cardiac output?

A

Cardiac output = stroke volume x heart rate

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12
Q

How do you calculate pulse pressure?

A

Pulse pressure = Systolic Pressure - Diastolic Pressure

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13
Q

What factors increase pulse pressure?

A
  1. a less compliant aorta (this tends to occur with advancing age)
  2. increased stroke volume
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14
Q

What is the calculation for mean arterial pressure and why is it this case?

A

MAP = (2xDBP) + SBP / 3

Diastolic multiplied by 2 because it is twice the systolic in length

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15
Q

What secretes endothelin?

A

secreted initially as a prohormone by the vascular endothelium and later converted to ET-1 by the action of endothelin converting enzyme