Extra Heart Flashcards
Does the heart beat faster or slower in marathon runners?
Slower: 50 times/min at rest
What 5 things did the Greeks think they knew about the heart in 280 B.C.?
- 4 main vessels: arteries and veins
- Heart has 2 sides
- Right side was the only one to hold blood and did not pump
- Left side contained intelligence
- Valves were present at the root of great vessels
What are the 4 components of the CV system?
- Heart
- Vascular system
- Volemia
- Pulmonary microcirculation
What are 5 possible causes of pericardial pathological conditions?
- Pericarditis
- Pericardial effusion
- Cardiac tamponade
- Cardiomegaly
- Hemopericardium
How do bacteria or viruses reach the pericardial space?
Piece of fascia extends from base of the skull to the thorax
What are 3 potential causes of cardiac tamponade?
- Ruptured aortic aneurism
- Ruptured myocardial infarct
- Penetrating injury
Can any blood born pathogen have potential access to the pericardial sac?
YUP
What are the 5 signs of cardiac tamponade?
- Elevated venous pressure
- Distended neck veins
- Distant heart sounds
- Patient in variable degrees of shock
- Decreased arterial and pulse pressures
What does pathognomic mean?
Characteristic for a particular disease
Is the elevated venous pressure a pathognomic sign of cardiac tamponade?
YUP
Is the decrease arterial and pulse pressures a pathognomic sign of cardiac tamponade? What does this mean?
NOPE
Unreliable for diagnosis
What is an aneurysm? Vessels in which this is most commonly found? Long-term consequence?
Excessive sac-like localized enlargement of a vessel due to vessel weakening
Most commonly found in abdominal aorta and carotid arteries
LT consequence: bursting due to gradual worsening of the weakening of the wall
How does venous pressure increase during cardiac tamponade?
Linearly
What are the 4 signs of pericarditis?
- Atypical chest pain
- High-pitched friction rub
- Effusion (mimics cardiac tamponade)
- Exudate associated with acute disease
To where can the fluid in the pericardial space drain to?
Two cardiac sinuses = spaces created by the reflections of the serous pericardium
Where are the borders of the 2 cardiac sinuses?
Where the visceral pericardium extends off the surface of the heart to become continuous with the parietal pericardium
Which coronary artery is called the widow maker?
LAD
What is a common complication of coronary ischemia? How fast does this occur?
Ischemic necrosis of the heart (tissue death)
Within 20-30 min after occlusion
+ cardiac tamponade
What is the clinical presentation of myocardial ischemia?
- Angina pectoris = pressure, discomfort, or feeling of choking in the left chest that radiates to the left shoulder and arm as well as the neck, jaw/teeth, abdomen, and back (referred pain)
- Shortness of breath
- Nausea/vomiting
- Perspiration
- Weakness, collapse, coma
Where does MI usually begin? Why?
In the subendorcardium because most poorly perfused region of the ventricular wall