CVS Pumping of the heart Flashcards
Define systole and diastole
Systole is the period when the myocardium is contracting (280ms)
Diastole is the relaxation between contractions (700ms)
Explain the spread of excitation in systole
The SA node fires an AP which spreads over the atria via the internal tracts
When the AP reaches the AV node there is a brief delay (120ms)
The excitation then travels along the bundle of His down the septum (down left and right bundle branch)
and across the ventricles via the purkinje fibres
Excitation spreads from endo to epicardial surface
Why do the ventricles contract from the apex upwards?
Ventricular muscle is organised into figure of eight shaped bands that squeeze in a slight twisting manner most effective for ejection of blood through the outflow valve.
Whats the difference between the right and left sides of the heart?
The left side has a much thicker ventricular wall as it must generate enough force to get blood around the entire body whereas the right side only needs to pump to the lungs.
The right side has the SA node pacemaker.
What causes the 1st and 2nd heart sounds?
1st sound:
As the AV valves close ‘lup’ (tricuspid + bicuspid)
2nd sound:
As the semilunar valves close ‘dup’ (aortic + pulmonary)
What is stroke volume? Give a value for an average resting male
Stroke volume is the volume of blood per minute from each ventricle
At rest stroke volume is ~70ml
Give the formula for blood pressure
BP = cardiac output x total peripheral resistance
Give an outline of the cardiac cycle
Atrial contraction:
Atrial pressure rises due to atrial systole, accounts for final 10% of ventricular filling
Isovolumetric contraction:
Mitral valve closes, and rise in ventricular pressure as it contracts (all valves closed so no change in volume)
Rapid ejection:
Aortic valve opens, rapid decrease in ventricular volume as blood is ejected. Atrial pressure decreases as atrial base in pulled downwards when the ventricle contracts
Reduced ejection:
Repolarisation of ventricle means rate of ejection falls
Isovolumetric relaxation:
Brief back flow causing aortic valve to close. Rapid decline in ventricular pressure but no change in volume as all valves closed
Rapid filling:
Mitral opens and there is rapid ventricular filling
Reduced filling:
Rate slows down as ventricle reaches its relaxed volume (passive filling at maximum)
Where in the cardiac cycle does each valve open and close?
Pulmonary + aortic valve:
Open in systole when ventricular pressure exceeds arterial pressure.
Close towards end of systole, back flow of blood closes the valves
Tricuspid + mitral valves:
Open in early diastole
Remain open in early systole until pressure exceeds atria and brief back flow of blood causes closure
What is the cause of a heart murmur?
A murmur is a sound caused by turbulent blood flow, the turbulence is due to stenosis (a narrowed valve) or a leaky valve (regurgitation of blood)
What are the different types of heart murmurs?
Systolic murmurs
Diastolic murmurs
Continuous murmurs (patent ductus arteriosus)