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name the 3 principal components of the cardiovascular system
heart, blood vessels, blood
what 3 body systems impact the cardiovascular system?
endocrine, nervous, renal
name the functions of the cardiovascular system
- supply oxygen, nutrients to all cells in the body
- remove metabolic wastes
- temperature regulation
- distribute hormones
- clotting of open wounds
- immuno-vigilance
name the components of blood
plasma, leukocytes, platelets, erythrocytes, immune system component
t/f: blood plasma is at least 90% water
t
do mature RBCs divide like "normal" cells?
no
t/f: RBCs have large surface areas that favor diffusion
t
protein that binds oxygen and carbon dioxide
hemoglobin
what is the average life span of an RBC?
120 days
hormone from kidneys that triggers differentiation of stem cells into RBCs
erythropoietin
process that synthesizes RBCs in red bone marrow
erythropoiesis
what are the 2 loops in the circulatory system?
pulmonary, systemic
this loop carries deoxygenated blood to lungs and back to heart
pulmonary
this loop carries oxygenated blood from the heart to the rest of the body
systemic
t/f: the circulatory system is a closed system (i.e. leaks are bad)
t
generally, veins carry blood (to/away from) the heart
to
generally, arteries carry blood (to/away from) the heart
away from
name the 4 chambers of the heart
right atria, right ventricle, left atria, left ventricle
of the 4 chambers, which is the most powerful/highest pressure and why?
left ventricle because it's sending blood to the rest of the body
what is the path of blood?
right atria -> right ventricle -> lungs -> left atria -> left ventricle -> systemic loop
name the 4 valves and the direction they facilitate blood through
- right AV valve/tricuspid: RA -> RV
- pulmonary/semilunar valve: RV -> pulmonary artery
- left AV valve/bicuspid/mitral: LA -> LV
- aortic/semilunar valve: LV -> aorta
t/f: valves ensure a one-way bloodflow
t
when pressure is greater behind the valve, the valve will (open/close)
open
when pressure is greater in front of the valve, the valve will (open/close)
close
order the 3 walls of the heart from innermost to outermost
endocardium, myocardium, epicardium
cells in the myocardium are connected by _____
intercalated disks
what are the 2 types of contacts in the myocardium's cardiac muscle? describe their functions.
desmosomes: mechanically hold cells together
gap junctions: provide low-resistance paths to electrical current flow between cells
gap junctions in the myocardium enable cardiac muscle to form a functional ___
syncytium
the epicardium is filled with a small volume of ____ fluid
pericardial
what are the 2 types of cardiac cells and their prevalence (%)?
- force producing cells (a.k.a. myocytes, contractile cells): 99% of cardiac cells
- pacemaker cells: 1% of cardiac cells
force producing cells vs. pacemaker cells
- myocytes: contraction activity
- pacemaker cells: no contractile components, sets rhythm of heart
what does it mean that the heart is autorhythmic?
the heart is capable of generating its own electrical activity
pacemaker cells are grouped together into ___
nodes
what are the 4 types of vg channels involved in electrical pacemaker activity, in order?
1. f-type (funny) sodium channel
2. t-type (transient) calcium channel
3. l-type (long-lasting) calcium channel/DHP channel
4. potassium channels, several types
the slope of pacemaker potential affects ___ ____
heart rate
name the steps of electrical pacemaker activity in order.
.
what are the 2 nodes in the heart?
sinoatrial (SA) and atrioventricular (AV)
autorhythmicity of SA node
70 AP/min
audtorhythmicity of AV node
50 AP/min
what is the internodal pathway?
conveys electrical info from SA node -> AV node
- tract of specialized cardiac pacemaker cells
- originates at AV node
- projects into left/right ventricles
bundle of his
- small terminal fibers of specialized cardiac pacemaker cells
- extend from bundle of his -> spread throughout ventricular myocardium
Purkinje fibers
purkinje fibers have a very (fast/slow) conduction velocity
fast
autorhythmmicity of purkinje fibers
30 AP/min
what are the 2 pacemaker pathways?
interatrial and internodal
- conducts pacemaker activity from RA -> LA
- both atria contract at the same time due to fast conduction velocity
interatrial pathway
AV nodal delay function
ensures ventricles contract after atrial conraction
cardiac APs in pacemaker vs. contractile cells
contractile cells: more negative resting potential, Na+ influx facilitated by VG Na+ channel (not F), has plateau and falling phase
what causes the plateau phase in an AP in a contractile cell?
increase in Ca2+ permeability via L channels, decrease in K+ permeability
what causes the falling phase in an AP in a contractile cell?
decrease in Ca2+ permeability, increase in K+ permeability via VG K channels
cardiac muscle contraction vs. voluntary (skeletal) muscle contraction
cardiac: longer APs, has plateau period, doesn't require nerve stimulation (autorhythmic), contraction occurs DURING the AP
what is the purpose of the heart's long twitch and prolonged refractory period?
allows time for ventricles to fill with blood before pumping
name the steps of excitation-contraction coupling in order
.
what is the "trigger" Ca2+ involved in excitation-contraction coupling in cardiac muscle?
it's a small amount that binds to and opens the ryanodine receptor Ca2+ channels in the SR
what do ECGs measure?
voltage differences between 2 points on the body's surface, a composite of electrical activity (i.e. NOT a single AP)
what does the P-wave represent on an ECG?
depolarization of atria via SA node
what does the QRS complex represent on an ECG?
depolarization of ventricles, with simultaneous repolarization of the atria
what does the T-wave represent on an ECG?
repolarization of ventricles
fast heartbeat
tachycardia
extrasystole
premature beat
ventricles weakly contract over and over again instead of pumping blood, no QRS complexes (i.e. ventricles don't depolarize)
ventricular fibrillation
what does an ECG scan of a complete heart block look like?
QRS and P waves happen at random times, responding independently
what is the cause of a complete heart block?
SA node may be signaling normally to the AV node, but the AV node doesn't pass on those signals
all the events involved with blood flow through the heart during 1 heart beat is called the
cardiac cycle
ventricular contraction phase
systole
ventricular relaxation phase
diastole
list the steps of the cardiac cycle
.
amount of blood in ventricles at end of diastole (nearly full)
end-diastolic volume
amount of blood left in ventricles at end of systole (nearly empty)
end-systolic volume
amount of blood ejected during systole
stroke volume
how is stroke volume calculated?
SV = EDV - ESV
what is the % ejection fraction during rest?
50-75%
the first heart sound represents closing of the ___ valves
AV
the second heart sound represents closing of the ___ valves
semilunar
what does the first heart sound sound like?
low-pitched, soft, long, "lub"
what does the second heart sound sound like?
high-pitched, sharp, short, "dup"
abnormal heart sounds often associated with cardiac disease
heart murmurs
what is the cause of heart murmurs?
turbulent flow of blood through malfunctioning valves
stiff, narrow valve that doesn't open completely
stenotic valve
what is the cause of turbulence in a stenotic valve?
blood must be forced through the valve at high velocity
what does a stenotic valve sound like?
whistling sound
valve that doesn't close properly
insufficient valve
what is the cause of turbulence for an insufficient valve?
blood flows backward through the valve, colliding with blood moving in opposite directions
what does an insufficient valve sound like?
swishing sound
laminar flow
non-turbulent blood flow
list 3 potential causes of heart murmurs
rheumatic fever, mitral stenosis, septal effects (holes in heart)
what is the type of valve defect, timing of murmur, and valve disorder of the following heart sound:
lub-whistle-dup
stenotic, systolic, stenotic semilunar valve
what is the type of valve defect, timing of murmur, and valve disorder of the following heart sound:
lub-dup-whistle
stenotic, diastolic, stenotic AV valve
what is the type of valve defect, timing of murmur, and valve disorder of the following heart sound:
lub-swish-dup
insufficient, systolic, insufficient AV valve
what is the type of valve defect, timing of murmur, and valve disorder of the following heart sound:
lub-dup-swish
insufficient, diastolic, insufficient semilunar valve
volume of blood pumped by each ventricle per minute
cardiac output
what 2 factors determine cardiac output?
heart rate and stroke volume
how is CO calculated?
CO = HR x SV
what is the average HR in bmp?
70
what is the average SV in mL?
70
what is the average cardiac output in L/min?
5
HR is regulated by what 2 systems
parasympathetic and sympathetic NS
SV is regulated extrinsically by the
sympathetic NS
SV is regulated intrinsically by
the volume of venous blood returning to the ventricles
Ach results in a (shallower/steeper) slope at the beginning of pacemaker potential
shallower