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Download Cardiovascular System Notes
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Cardiovascular System Notes Basics CVS is composed of the heart & blood vessels Cardio- = heart -vascular = blood vessels Basic path: arteries arteriolescapillariesvenules veins Pulmonary circuit: sends deoxygenated blood to the lungs to get O2 and get rid of CO2 Systemic Circuit: sends O2-rich blood & nutrients all over body; removes wastes Path of blood 1. O2- poor blood to right atrium 2. Right atrium to right ventricle 3. Right ventricle pumps to lungs 4. Lungs to left atrium 5. Left atrium to left ventricle 6. Left ventricle to body Structure of heart Hollow, cone-shaped muscular pump In thoracic cavity, on top of the diaphragm Size: approx. 14 cm long by 9 cm wide Pericardium = covering around heart Heart wall = epicardium (outer layer); myocardium (muscular middle layer); endocardium (inner layer) Chambers 2 atria on top; thin walls; receive blood 2 ventricles on bottom; thicker walls; pumps blood out into arteries Septum: wall that separates left & right sides Valves Function: to ensure one-way blood flow A-V (atrioventricular) valves: tricuspid & mitral o Tricuspid: on right; 3 cusps (flaps) o Mitral: on left; a.k.a. bicuspid; only 2 cusps Pulmonary valve: between right ventricle & pulmonary artery; 3 cusps Aortic valve: at base of aorta and top of left ventricle; 3 cusps Blood Supply Coronary arteries: First 2 branches of aorta; provide for the capillaries of the myocardium Cardiac veins: remove blood from myocardial capillaries Coronary sinus: empties into right atrium Cardiac cycle Systole = contraction Diastole = relaxation Cycle = atrial systole / ventricular diastole ventricular systole / atrial diastole both relax = a complete heart beat Heart sounds Through a stethoscope sounds like “lubb-dupp” Lubb = ventricular contraction; A-V valves closing Dupp = ventricular relaxation; pulmonary & aortic valves closing Murmur = abnormal heart sounds Functional Syncytium Mass of merging cells that function as a unit Atrial walls and ventricular walls Cardiac conduction system Fibers that initiate and distribute impulses throughout the myocardium Coordinates cardiac cycle Sinoatrial node (S-A node) In right atrium near superior vena cava Initiates impulses that spread into myocardium and cause cardiac contractions A.k.a. the pacemaker The Path S-A note atrial syncytium junctional fibers A-V node A-V bundle bundle branches Purkinje fibers ventricular syncytium Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) Recording of electrical changes during cardiac cycle Muscle fibers are polarized between cycles P wave = depolarization of ventricles T wave = ventricles repolarizing P-Q interval = time between beginning of P wave and beginning of QRS complex; time for impulse to travel from S-A node through A-V node Regulation of Cardiac Cycle cells need more blood during certain times, like strenuous exercise Parasympathetic or sympathetic nerve fibers “tell” the heart to increase heart rate Temperature changes can affect HR (colder = slower HR) Ions affect HR (Ca+2, K+) Blood Vessels Closed circuit Tubes that carry blood from the heart to the cells and back Includes: arteries, arterioles capillaries, venules, veins Arteries & Arterioles Carry blood away from the heart Under high pressure Arteries are larger Arterioles are smaller and branched Contain muscle in the artery wall Vasoconstriction: contraction of the artery Vasodilation: increase diameter of the vessel Aorta = largest diameter artery Capillaries Smallest diameter blood vessel Connect to arterioles and venules Where exchange of gases and nutrients happens between blood and cells Happens by osmosis, diffusion and filtration Veins and venules Carry blood back to heart Veins are larger than venules Lower pressure than in arteries and arterioles Less muscle in the wall than arteries Many contain valves Blood pressure Force blood exerts against the inner walls of blood vessels Systolic pressure: max pressure during ventricular contraction Diastolic pressure: lower pressure during ventricular relaxation Influenced by stroke volume / cardiac output, blood volume, peripheral resistance, viscosity Normal = 120 / 80 (+/ - 20)