Regulating the SV & HR Flashcards
What is cardiac ischaemia?
A reduction in blood flow to the heart muscle. Usually due to constriction of coronary arteries
What does the hearts inotropic state refer to?
The strength of the muscles contraction
How does physiological increase of the HR work?
Sympathetic fibres release noradrenaline which works alongiside adrenaline circulating from the adrenal medulla.
Noradrenaline/Adrenaline work on B1-receptors in the sinoatrial node to increase the slope of the pacemaker potential and thus HR
(Also decrease in parasympathetic tone)
How does physiological decrease in HR work?
Parasympathetic fibres in the vagus nerve release acetylcholine.
ACh acts on muscarinic receptors in the sinoatrial node.
The Cell hyperpolarises and the slope of the pacemaker potential lengthens causing a decrease in HR
(Also decrease in sympathetic tone)
What 4 things affect Stroke Volume?
Preload
Afterload
Neural tone
Pathologys
What is preload?
the initial length of the muscle fibres
What is starlings law?
Starling’s law dictates that the initial length of the muscle (preload) is proportional to the energy of contraction
Meaning increasing preload will increase energy of contraction and thus SV
What determines preload?
The End Diastolic Volume because it stretches the muscle fibres
How does EDV relate to SV?
An increased EDV leads to an increased SV
A decreased EDV leads to a decreased SV
What determines EDV?
The venous return to that side of the heart
How is the stroke volume of each side kept equal?
The stroke volume of the right side is the amount of blood that returns to the left side through the pulmonary veins.
Since: venous return -> EDV -> preload -> SV the venous return to the left should be the same as that of the right.
What vessels can affect preload?
The capacitance vessels like venules and veins
What is afterload?
The load against which the muscle is trying to contract. In the left side of the heart this is the arterial pressure holding shut the aortic valve
What effects aortic pressure? and what does this mean for the SV?
The total peripheral resistance (TPR).
- TPR increase
- > Ventricle requires more energy to force open the valve
- > Ventricle has less energy for ejecting blood
- > SV decreases.
How does the parasympathetic system affect SV?
Noradrenaline/Adrenaline act on B1-receptors in myocytes.
Contractility increases (inotropic effect)
A Shorter, Stronger contraction occurs
Increased SV