The Heart as a Pump And Control of Cardiac Output Flashcards
What do capacitance vessels do?
Enable the system to vary the amount of blood pumped through the body.
What do resistance vessels do?
Restrict blood flow to drive supply to hard to perfuse areas of the body.
What are auricles?
Appendages of the atria.
Define systole.
Contraction and ejection of blood from ventricles.
Define diastole.
Relaxation and filling of ventricles.
What are the typical values for stroke volume, heart rate and cardiac output at rest?
70/80L X 70bpm = 5L
Describe some features of heart muscle and its action potential.
Discrete cells interconnected electrically (functional syncytium via gap junctions), striated, cells contract in response to an action potential in membranes causing a rise in intracellular calcium concentration - cardiac action potential is long - lasts duration of single contraction (280ms) - triggered by spread of excitation from cell to cell.
Name the 4 valves of the heart and state how many cusps they each have.
Tricuspid valve, pulmonary valve and aortic valve - 3 cusps. Mitral valve - 2 cusps, unless congenital abnormality.
What determines whether a valve is open or closed?
The differential blood pressure on either side of it.
What are the cusps of the mitral and tricuspid valves attached to and why?
Chordae tendineae connected to papillary muscles to prevent inversion of valves at systole.
Describe the path of the cardiac action potential.
Pacemaker cells in the SAN generate the AP, then activity spreads over the atria for atrial systole and is delayed at the AVN for 120ms, then excitation spreads down the septum then through ventricular myocardium from inner/endocardium to out/epicardial surface.
Ventricles contract from apex up.
How does the heart respond to an increased heart rate in terms of systole and diastole?
Time taken for systole remains constant, but diastole is quicker.
Name the 7 phases of the cardiac cycle.
- Atrial contraction
- Isovolumetric contraction
- Rapid ejection
- Reduced ejection
- Isovolumetric relaxation
- Rapid filling
- Reduced filling
What makes phases 2 and 5 of the cardiac cycle ‘isovolumetric’?
The volume in the ventricles does not change, because both the aortic and mitral valves are closed, so there’s nowhere for blood to get in or out.
What is the ‘a wave’ and what is its counterpart shown in an ECG?
When atrial systole raises the pressure in the atrium and a ‘p wave’ is shown in an ECG to signify atrial depolarisation.
What does QRS complex on an ECG show and when?
It shows ventricular depolarisation during isovolumetric contraction.
What does isovolumetric contraction do to the pressure inside the ventricle and how is this expressed graphically?
Increases it, as shown by the ‘C wave’ on a graph.
What is the ‘X descent’ of atrial pressure?
When atrial pressure decreases during rapid ejection, because the ventricles contract and decrease in volume and pull down on the base of the atria. Blood is still flowing in.
Why does the rate of ejection fall?
Depolarisation of the ventricles reduces tension. A ‘T wave’ is shown on an ECG.