Case 2- factors that effect heart contraction Flashcards
Hypercalcaemia
High Ca+ concentration in the blood, you have increased force contractions as you have a more sustained depolarisation. If you have raised systolic calcium levels, the calcium ATPase pumps become saturated meaning they can’t remove them all meaning the muscle can not relax. This can cause a cardiac arrest in sytole. Short QT interval, shortening of ST segment
Hypernatremia
High Na+ concentration in the blood. More sodium will enter cardiac tissue and we get a slight depolarisation making it more excitable. It is more likely to meet the threshold as its slightly more positive then it should be. More sodium will enter the cell when the sodium channels open. The rate of depolarisation, amplitude and duration of action potential will all increase. As its more excitable it may fire out of sync with the rest of the heart which could cause arrhythmia
Hyperkalaemia
High K+ concentration. Decrease the K gradient across the cell membrane, this will reduce K efflux. The cell is initially more excitable as its nearer the threshold potential, as its slightly depolarised as there is more K+ within the cell. Causes conduction problems as the Na+ channel cannot reset as repolarisation isn’t happening, meaning it cannot generate another action potential upstroke. Can cause a cardiac arrest in diastole and death. Reduced P waves and unusual T waves (peaked).
Hypomagnesia
Low Mg levels. The Na/K ATPase is Mg dependent so without it you have K depletion and Na retention. Mg depletion can be from diuretic use and is associated with arrhythmias and sudden death. As it upsets the electrolyte balance either side of the membrane, it may fire out of sync. A short PQ and QRS, there will be a shortening of the QT and a negative T wave
Strove volume
The amount of blood pumped per ventricle
Cardiac output
The volume pumped per ventricle per minute
Venous return
The volume of blood returning to the heart, VR should equal CO
What is cardiac output controlled by
Stroke volume and heart rate. Stroke volume depends on how strong the contractions are which is dependent of the length-tension relationship of muscle fibres as well as their strength. Heart rate is controlled by the sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves.
What does preload depend on
The degree of stretch in the ventricles due to end diastolic pressure, it is dependent on EDV (end diastolic volume). Changes in stroke volume are dependent on resting ventricular muscle fibre length (preload).
Ejection fraction
The percentage of blood that left the ventricle, its always under 100%
Mechanisms is which venous return changes in exercise
- Skeletal muscle pump- skeletal muscle contractions increase, this squeezes the blood in the veins.
- Increases rate and depth of ventilation- this enhances thoracic and abdominal negative pressure when the thoracic wall stretches out. This draws venous blood into the thoracic cavity meaning venous return increases.
- Vasoconstriction of small veins- caused by sympathetic nerves. Increases pressure and helps suck blood back to the lungs. Vasodilation in areas of the body where blood flow in needed
Mechanisms that boost cardiac output in exercise
- Atrial booster pump= caused by increased venous return which stretches the atrial wall so that there are more forceful atrial contractions. This compensates for the shorter diastole during exercise.
- Increased ventricular suction during diastole- after the ventricle contracts and pushes blood in the aorta a backpressure is created which helps suck blood from the atria
- Increased myocardial contractility- the ventricular wall stretches, also caused by noradrenaline and adrenaline release.
- Increased heart rate- due to the sympathetic nervous system. Begins at the onset of exercise.
What happens to the cardiac cycle during exercise
Heart rate may increase by a factor of 3 and stroke volume increases by 50%. Cardiac cycle is shortened, diastole is shorter then systole
Effects of exercising regularly
- Cardiac muscle increases
- Skeletal muscle mass increases- this will cause more capillaries to develop to improve the blood supply to the muscles, there is reduced diffusion distance and increased oxygen delivery
- Cardiac physiological changes- EDV increases (up to 200ml) so there is increased ventricular return this causes stroke volume to increase. Heart rate will be lower. Maximum heart rate does not significantly change but because stroke volume is bigger cardiac output will be higher.
Beneficial effects of exercise on CVS
Lowers blood pressure, improves endothelial function, improves circulation, improves lipid metabolism