M1: The heart (cardiovascular system) Flashcards
Components of CV system
Heart, blood, blood vessels
what are pulmonary and systemic circulation?
How blood is circulated out of the heart
PULMONARY
- deoxygenated blood that passes through the lungs
- pumped from right side of the heart
SYSTEMIC
- oxygenated blood goes to body tissues
- pumped from left side of the heart
- upper and lower components (head/upper limbs or thorax/lower limbs)
Name the functions of the heart
- generating blood pressure
- routing blood (separates pulmonary, systemic and coronary circulation)
- ensures one way blood flow
- regulating blood supply (changes in contraction rate and force to accommodate metabolic needs)
coronary circulation
circulation that serves the heart tissue itself
what cavity is the heart located in?
thoracic cavity
mediastinum
everything in the thoracic cavity except the lungs
positioning of atria and ventricles on the heart
atria: more posterior
ventricles: more anterior
label images on heart location
image found in goodnotes
names for sides of the heart
APEX: anterior, inferior and left. The pointed part
BASE: posterior, superior and right. Flatter top.
layers of the pericardium
FIBROUS pericardium
- outer layer
- anchor (attached to diaphragm)
- dense irregular CT
- prevents over-distension (overgrowth)
- creates wall between heart and pleura
SEROUS pericardium
- parietal (outer) and visceral (inner) components
- in between is serous fluid
- simple squamous
layers of heart wall, superficial to deep
EPICARDIUM/VISCERAL PARICARDIUM
name depends on if you’re referring to heart layers or pericardium
- simple squamous epithelium
- loose connective and adipose tissue
MYOCARDIUM
- heart muscle
- thickest part of heart wall
ENDOCARDIUM
- thin simple squamous layer
- TRABECULAE CARNE (column like ridges/projections in ventricles only. extension of cardiac muscle)
- in R artium, these columns are called PECTINATE MUSCLES (smoother)
great vessels of heart
SUPERIOR/INFERIOR VENA CAVA
- bring deoxygenated blood to R atrium
PULMONARY TRUNK/L+R PULMONARY ARTERIES
- take blood from R ventricle to pulmonary circulation
PULMONARY VEINS
- oxygenated blood into L atrium
AORTA/AORTIC ARCH
- oxygenated blood out of heart to body
auricles
flap like extensions on atria
sulci
grooves on surface of heart containing coronary blood vessels and fat
3 types of sulci in the heart
- CORONARY SULCUS
- encircles heart, marks boundary between atria and ventricles - ANTERIOR INTERVENTRICULAR SULCUS
- marks boundary between vetricles anteriorly - POSTERIOR INTERVENTRICULAR SULCUS
-marks boundary between ventricels posteriorly
Coronary arteries and their branches
RIGHT CORONARY ARTERY
- exits aorta just superior to where aorta exits heart; lies in coronary sulcus
- extends to posterior aspect of heart
Branches
- RIGHT MARGINAL ARTERY (supplies lateral wall of RV)
- POSTERIOR INTERVENTRICUAR ARTERY (in posterior interventricular sulcus, supplies posterior and inferior heart)
LEFT CORONARY ARTERY
Branches
- *ANTERIOR INTERVENTRICULAR ARTERY or left anterior descending artery (very important! supplies L ventricle)
- CIRCUMFLEX ARTERY (supplies posterior heart)
- LEFT MARGINAL ARTERY (supplies lateral wall of L ventricle)
Coronary veins
GREAT CARDIAC VEIN
- drains L side of heart
SMALL CARDIAC VEIN
- drains R side of heart
MIDDLE CARDIAC VEIN
- drains posterior heart
CORONARY SINUS
- large venous cavity, empties into R atrium