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Anatomy of the Heart KayOnda Bayo 1 2 2 Circuits Pulmonary •Heart lungs  heart Systemic •Heart  body  heart 3 The heart=a muscular double pump with 2 functions 4 Overview  The right side receives oxygen-poor blood from the body and tissues and then pumps it to the lungs to pick up oxygen and dispel carbon dioxide  Its left side receives oxygenated blood returning from the lungs and pumps this blood throughout the body to supply oxygen and nutrients to the body tissues 5 Arteries • Carry blood away from heart • Except pulmonary arteries (carries deoxygenated blood) Veins • Carry blood to heart • Except pulmonary veins (carries oxygenated blood) 6 simplified…  Cone shaped muscle  Four chambers  Two atria, two ventricles  Double pump – the ventricles  Two circulations  Systemic circuit: blood vessels that transport blood to and from all the body tissues  Pulmonary circuit: blood vessels that carry blood to and from the lungs 7 Heart’s position in thorax Heart’s position in thorax In mediastinum – behind sternum and pointing left, lying on the diaphragm It weighs 250-350 gm (about 1 pound) Feel your heart beat at apex (this is of a person lying down) 8 9 Coverings of the Heart Fibrous Pericardium Visceral Layer Parietal Layer 10 Layers of the Heart Pericardium Myocardium Endocardium 11  Pericardium (double-walled sac)  Protects against infection  Provides lubrication to the heart  Fixes the heat to the mediastinum  Myocardium  Middle layer  Contains many capillaries & nerve endings  Has cardiac muscle forming the bulk of the heart – thickest layer  Layer that contracts  Endocardium  Has an endothelial layer that lines the heart chambers  Contains Perkinje fibers (specialized nerve fibers used during the heart beat) How Pericardium is Formed Around the Heart 12 Pericardial Cavity  Between the parietal and visceral layer of the serous pericardium  Contains serous fluid  lubricates membranes to reduce friction  *Pericarditis: inflammation of the pericardium that roughens the serous membrane surface 13 14  The Heart is enclosed within a double-walled sac called the pericardium.  Consists of 2 layers  Fibrous pericardium  Serous pericardium  Fibrous pericardium:  Composed of dense connective tissue (protects the heart)  Anchors to surrounding walls  Prevents the heart from overfilling with blood  Serous pericardium  Located deep to fibrous pericardium  Contains 2 layers  function to lubricate the heart to prevent friction during activity 15 Heart Chambers  There are 4 chambers in the heart  2 superior ventricles  2 inferior atria  Atriums known as the receiving chamber  Ventricles known as the discharging chambers 16 Chambers of the heart sides are labeled in reference to the patient facing you  Two atria  Right atrium  Left atrium --------------------------------------------------------------------------------  Two ventricles  Right ventricle  Left ventricle Chambers of the heart divided by septae:  Two atria-divided by interatrial septum  Right atrium  Left atrium  Two ventricles-divided by interrventricular septum  Right ventricle  Left ventricle 17 Relative thickness of muscular walls 18 LV thicker than RV because it forces blood out against more resistance; the systemic circulation is much longer than the pulmonary circulation Atria are thin because ventricular filling is done by gravity, requiring little atrial effort 19 Pectinate muscles Auricle Atria +Fossa ovalis +Foramen ovale 20 The Fossa Ovalis is an embryonic remnant of the foramen ovale, which normally closes after birth. Following birth, the foramen ovale is covered by a fibrous sheet. Failure of the foramen ovale to close results in a disorder called patent foramen ovale. 21 Trabecular carneae Chordae tendineae Ventricles Papillary muscles 22 Heart Valves: Atrioventricular (AV) Valves  Prevent backflow into the atria when the ventricles contract  Both valves contains 3 cusps  Tricuspid valve (right AV valve) has 3 flexible cusps  Mitral valve (left AV valve) has 2 cusps a.k.a. “bicuspid valve” 23 Heart Valves: Semilunar (AV) Valves  Prevent backflow into associated ventricles  Aortic valve protects the orifice between the left ventricle and the aorta  Pulmonary valve guards the orifice between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery 24 Homeostatic Imbalance of Heart Valves Heart valves can function with “leaky” valves as long as the impairment is not too severe. Severe valve deformities can seriously hamper cardiac function. Problems with Valves:  An incompetent valve forces the heart to pump the same blood over and over because the valve does not close properly.  When stenosis occurs, the valve flaps become stiff and constrict the opening heart contracts more than normal In both conditions, the heart’s workload increases  weakens the heart overtime Treatment: Heart valve is replaced with: • Mechanical Heart • Pig or cow valve (chemically treated to reduce rejection) 25 Blood Return to R-atrium Superior vena cava (SVC) Inferior vena cava (IVC) Coronary sinus (CS) Pathway of Blood Through the Heart 27 Pathway of Blood (cont.) Superior vena cava, Inferior vena cava, Coronary sinus Left Ventricle Right Atrium Mitral Valve Left Atrium Aortic Semilunar valve Aorta Rest of the Body Tricuspid valve Right Ventricl e 28 Pulmonary Semilunar valve 4 pulmonary veins Pulmonary Artery & Trunk Lungs Coronary Artery Circulation 29 Even though the heart is filled with blood, the blood provides little nourishment to the heart (the myocardium tissue is too thick). Blood is supplied to the heart via Coronary Circulation which is the shortest circulation in the body. Branching of Coronary Arteries Right Coronary Artery (RCA)  Branches into:  Right marginal artery  Posterior descending artery  Supplies:  Right atrium  Bottom portion of both ventricles and back of septum  Together the RCA and its branches supply the R. Atrium and nearly all the ventricles. Left Coronary Artery (Left Main Trunk)  Branches into:  Circumflex artery  Anterior interventricular artery  Supplies:  Circumflex Artery: left atrium, side and back of the left ventricle  Anterior interventricular artery: front and bottom of the left ventricle and front of the septum 30 *What happens when a coronary artery is blocked? 31  Angina Pectoris  Myocardial Infarction (MI) Homeostatic Imbalance of Coronary Blood Flow Partial blockade • Decreased blood flow  ischemia  angina • Treatment:???? Complete blockade • No blood flow  myocardial infarction • Treatment: ????? 32 33 Cardiac Muscle Cell Characteristics  Striated  Involuntary control  Short, fat branched, and interconnected  One to two large, centrally located nuclei 34 Unique Characteristic of the Heart  Some cardiac fibers are auto-rhythmic. These fibers have the ability to depolarize spontaneously and pace the heart.  The bulk of the heart consists of contractile muscle cells that are responsible for the heart’s pumping activity.  All cells of the heart MUST contract as a unit or the heart doesn’t contract at all.  Gap junctions electrically tie all cardiac muscle together into a single contractile unit. Physiology of the Heart KayOnda Bayo 35 Contractile Cell Action Potential  Four phases of action potential  Resting membrane potential -90 mV  Depolarization due to fast Na+ channels  Plateau due to slow Ca2+ channels  Repolarization due to K+ channels Action potential Plateau 20 2 0 Tension development (contraction) –20 –40 3 1 –60 Absolute refractory period –80 0 150(ms) Time 300 Tension (g) Membrane potential (mV) Contractile Cell A.P. 1 Depolarization is due to Na+ influx through fast voltage-gated Na+ channels. A positive feedback cycle rapidly opens many Na+ channels, reversing the membrane potential. Channel inactivation ends this phase. 2 Plateau phase is due to Ca2+ influx through slow Ca2+ channels. This keeps the cell depolarized because few K+ channels are open. 3 Repolarization is due to Ca2+ channels inactivating and K+ channels opening. This allows K+ efflux, which brings the membrane potential back to its resting voltage. © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Pacemaker Action Potential  Present in SA & AV node  Contains three phases  Slow depolarization  Unstable resting membrane potential  Between -60 mV to -40 mV Pacemaker (Autorhythmic) Cells  Unstable resting membrane potentials (pacemaker potentials)  opening of slow Na+ channels  Continuously depolarize  At threshold, Ca2+ channels open  Explosive Ca2+ influx  rising phase of A.P.  Repolarization  inactivation of Ca2+ channels  opening of voltage-gated K+ channels © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Pacemaker Action Potential  Three phases of action potential:  Pacemaker potential  Repolarization  closes K+ channels  opens slow Na+ channels  ion imbalance  Depolarization  Ca2+ channels open  huge influx  rising phase of A. P.  Repolarization  K+ channels open  efflux of K+ © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Membrane potential (mV) Pacemaker Action Potential +10 0 –10 –20 –30 –40 –50 –60 –70 Action potential 2 Threshold 2 Depolarization The action potential begins when the pacemaker potential reaches threshold. Depolarization is due to Ca2+ influx through Ca2+ channels. 2 3 3 1 1 Pacemaker potential Time (ms) © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Pacemaker potential This slow depolarization is due to both opening of Na+ channels and closing of K+ channels. Notice that the membrane potential is never a flat line. 3 Repolarization is due to Ca2+ channels inactivating and K+ channels opening. This allows K+ efflux, which brings the membrane potential back to its most negative voltage. Sequence of Excitation  Cardiac pacemaker cells pass impulses, in order, across heart in ~220 ms  Sinoatrial(SA) node   Atrioventricular(AV) node   Atrioventricular bundle   Right and left bundle branches   Subendocardial conducting network (Purkinje fibers) © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Heart Physiology: Sequence of Excitation  Sinoatrial (SA) node  Pacemaker of heart in right atrial wall  Depolarizes faster than rest of myocardium  Generates impulses  75X/minute (sinus rhythm)  Inherent rate of 100X/minute  Tempered by extrinsic factors  Impulse spreads across atria, and to AV node © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 18.15a Intrinsic cardiac conduction system and action potential succession during one heartbeat. Superior vena cava Right atrium 1 The sinoatrial (SA) node (pacemaker) generates impulses. Internodal pathway 2 The impulses pause (0.1 s) at the atrioventricular (AV) node. 3 The atrioventricular (AV) bundle connects the atria to the ventricles. 4 The bundle branches conduct the impulses through the interventricular septum. Left atrium Subendocardial conducting network (Purkinje fibers) Interventricular septum 5 The subendocardial conducting network depolarizes the contractile cells of both ventricles. Anatomy of the intrinsic conduction system showing the sequence of electrical excitation © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Heart Sounds  Two sounds (lub-dup) associated with closing of heart valves  First as AV valves close; beginning of systole ”lub”  S1  Tricuspid & Bicuspid(Mitral) Valves  Second as SL valves close; beginning of ventricular diastole “dup”  S2  Aortic & PulmonaryValves  Pause indicates heart relaxation  Heart murmurs - abnormal heart sounds; usually indicate incompetent valves © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 18.20 Areas of the thoracic surface where the sounds of individual valves can best be detected. Aortic valve sounds heard in 2nd intercostal space at right sternal margin. S2 Pulmonary valve sounds heard in 2nd intercostal space at left sternal margin. S2 Mitral valve sounds heard over heart apex (in 5th intercostal space) in line with middle of clavicle. S1 Tricuspid valve sounds typically heard in right sternal margin of 5th intercostal space. S1 © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Heart Sounds  Two sounds associated with filling of ventricles(Inaudible)  Rapid flow of blood from atria into ventricles  S3  Normally heard in children  Heard in adults associated with disease  Inflow of blood into ventricles during atrial systole  S4  Heard in disease state such as diastolic stiffness or high atrial pressure Cardiac Output (CO)  Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in one minute  CO = heart rate (HR) × stroke volume (SV)  HR = number of beats per minute  SV = volume of blood pumped out by one ventricle with each beat  Normal – 5.25 L/min © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Cardiac Output (CO)  At rest  CO (ml/min) = HR (75 beats/min)  SV (70 ml/beat) = 5.25 L/min  CO increases if either/both SV or HR increased  Maximal CO is 4–5 times resting CO in nonathletic people  Maximal CO may reach 35 L/min in trained athletes  Cardiac reserve - difference between resting and maximal CO © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Regulation of Stroke Volume  SV = EDV – ESV  EDV affected by length of ventricular diastole and venous pressure  ESV affected by arterial BP and force of ventricular contraction  Three main factors affect SV:  Preload  Contractility  Afterload © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Homeostatic Imbalance  Hypocalcemia  depresses heart  Hypercalcemia  increased HR and contractility  Hyperkalemia  alters electrical activity  heart block and cardiac arrest  Hypokalemia  feeble heartbeat; arrhythmias © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Homeostatic Imbalances  Tachycardia - abnormally fast heart rate (>100 beats/min)  If persistent, may lead to fibrillation  Bradycardia - heart rate slower than 60 beats/min  May result in grossly inadequate blood circulation in nonathletes  May be desirable result of endurance training © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Factors that Influence Heart Rate  Age  Fetus has fastest HR  Gender  Females faster than males  Exercise  Increases HR  Body temperature  Increases with increased temperature © 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. 54 QUESTIONS?
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            