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Chapter 15 Cardiovascular System 1 Size of Heart Average Size of Heart • 14 cm long • 9 cm wide 2 Heart • Hollow, fist-sized muscular organ • Located slightly to left of body’s midline • Acts as dual pumping system 3 Location of Heart • posterior to sternum • medial to lungs • anterior to vertebral column • base lies beneath 2nd rib • apex at 5th intercostal space • lies upon diaphragm 4 Coverings of Heart 5 Pericardium • Fibrous sac that covers heart –2 portions –Fibrous pericardium-external sac • Tough, white, fibrous tissue; fits loosely around heart • Protects heart & serous membrane –Serous pericardium: internal sac 6 Serous Layer • Serous layer - a smooth inner sac with lubricated surfaces which allow movement – parietal layer - lines the inner surface of the fibrous pericardium – visceral layer - covers the entire surface of the heart • The potential space between the parietal and visceral layers of the serous pericardium is the pericardial cavity. 7 8 9 10 *Image courtesy Indigo Instruments. Visit indigo.com for more original content like this. 11 Heart Wall: Layers •Endocardium •Myocardium • Epicardium 12 13 14 Wall of the Heart 15 Wall of the Heart 16 Heart Chambers Right Atrium • receives blood from • inferior vena cava • superior vena cava • coronary sinus Right Ventricle • receives blood from right atrium Left Atrium • receives blood from pulmonary veins Left Ventricle • receives blood from left atrium 17 Heart Valves 18 Coronal Sections of Heart 19 Heart Valves Tricuspid Valve Pulmonary and Aortic Valve 20 Skeleton of Heart • fibrous rings to which the heart valves are attached 21 Path of Blood Through the Heart 22 Path of Blood Through the Heart 23 Blood Supply to Heart 24 Blood Supply to Heart 25 Angiogram of Coronary Arteries 26 Heart Actions Atrial Systole/Ventricular Diastole Atrial Diastole/Ventricular Systole 27 Cardiac Cycle Atrial Systole/Ventricular Diastole • blood flows passively into ventricles • remaining 30% of blood pushed into ventricles • A-V valves open/semilunar valves close • ventricles relaxed • ventricular pressure increases 28 Cardiac Cycle Ventricular Systole/Atrial diastole • A-V valves close • chordae tendinae prevent cusps of valves from bulging too far into atria • atria relaxed • blood flows into atria • ventricular pressure increases and opens semilunar valves • blood flows into pulmonary trunk and aorta 29 Heart Sounds Lubb • first heart sound • occurs during ventricular systole • A-V valves closing Dupp • second heart sound • occurs during ventricular diastole • pulmonary and aortic semilunar valves closing Murmur – abnormal heart sound 30 Heart Sounds 31 Cardiac Conduction System 32 Cardiac Conduction & Control • Intrinsic: internally generated control • Extrinsic: control from outside heart • Heart rate controlled by both – A.N.S.: can fine tune heart – S.N.S.-can accelerate heart rate – P.S.-can slow heart rate – Hormones-can influence heart rate ex. epinephrine 33 Intrinsic Control • Sinoatrial node (S.A) • Atrioventricular Node (A.V.) • Bundle of His • Purkinje Fibers 34 Sinoatrial Node • The natural pacemaker of the heart • Location - junction of superior vena cava and right atrium • Impulse for contraction begins at the SA node and are conducted to the AV node by atrial mycardial fibers (internodal tracts) • The SA node is supplied by both divisions of the ANS 35 Atrioventricular Node • Located in lower right interatrial septum • Impulse slows • Slowing allows atria to contract & ventricle to fill with blood 36 37 Bundle of His • Originates in AV. Node • Divides into left and right branches • Impulse from AV. Continues into left and right bundle branches 38 Purkinje Fibers • Connect bundle branches to lateral walls of ventricle • Impulse moves through Purkinje fibers reaching ventricle muscles • Stimulation of ventricle muscles begins in intraventricular septum & moves downward • Depolarization of ventricles & contraction 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 Cardiac Conduction System 48 Electrocardiogram • recording of electrical changes that occur in the myocardium • used to assess heart’s ability to conduct impulses P wave – atrial depolarization QRS wave – ventricular depolarization T wave – ventricular repolarization 49 Electrocardiogram 50 Electrocardiogram A prolonged QRS complex may result from damage to the A-V bundle fibers 51 Cardiac Cycle 52 Clinical Application Arrhythmias Ventricular fibrillation • rapid, uncoordinated depolarization of ventricles Tachycardia • rapid heartbeat Atrial flutter • rapid rate of atrial depolarization 53 Regulation of Cardiac Cycle Autonomic nerve impulses alter the activities of the S-A and A-V nodes 54 Regulation of Cardiac Cycle Additional Factors that Influence HR • physical exercise • body temperature • concentration of various ions • potassium • calcium • parasympathetic impulses decrease heart action • sympathetic impulses increase heart action • cardiac center regulates autonomic impulses to the heart 55 56 Blood Vessels • arteries • carry blood away from ventricles of heart • arterioles • receive blood from arteries • carry blood to capillaries • capillaries • sites of exchange of substances between blood and body cells • venules • receive blood from capillaries • veins • carry blood toward ventricle of heart 57 Arteries Artery • thick strong wall • endothelial lining • middle layer of smooth muscle and elastic tissue • outer layer of connective tissue • Carry blood away from heart •Vascular resistance low •Mean arterial pressure = 100mmHg 58 59 Arterioles Arterioles • thinner wall than artery • endothelial lining • some smooth muscle tissue • small amount of connective tissue • helps control blood flow into a capillary • Mean pressure =85mmHg 60 Arteriole • smallest arterioles only have a few smooth muscle fibers • capillaries lack muscle fibers 61 Venules Venule • thinner wall than arteriole • less smooth muscle and elastic tissue than arteriole •Carry blood away from capillaries to veins •BP 15mmHg when blood returning to heart 62 Veins Vein • thinner wall than artery • three layers to wall but middle layer is poorly developed • serves as blood reservoir •Carry blood from venules to heart • have valves =prevent backflow of blood •Mean pressure =less than 15mmHg 63 64 65 66 Walls of Artery and Vein 67 Capillaries • smallest diameter blood vessels • extensions of inner lining of arterioles • walls are endothelium only; single layer • semipermeable • sinusoids – leaky capillaries •Join arterioles & venules •Vascular resistance low = 35mmHg 68 Capillary Network 69 70 Exchange in the Capillaries • water and other substances leave capillaries because of net outward pressure at the capillaries’ arteriolar ends • water enters capillaries’ venular ends because of a net inward pressure • substances move in and out along the length of the capillaries according to their respective concentration gradients 71 Venous Valves 72 Characteristics of Blood Vessels 73 Blood Volumes in Vessels 74 Arterial Blood Pressure Blood Pressure – force the blood exerts against the inner walls of the blood vessels Arterial Blood Pressure • rises when ventricles contract • falls when ventricles relax • systolic pressure – maximum pressure • diastolic pressure – minimum pressure 75 Pulse • alternate expanding and recoiling of the arterial wall that can be felt 76 Factors That Influence Arterial Blood Pressure 77 Control of Blood Pressure Controlling cardiac output and peripheral resistance regulates blood pressure 78 Control of Blood Pressure If blood pressure rises, baroreceptors initiate the cardioinhibitory reflex, which lowers the blood pressure 79 Control of Blood Pressure Dilating arterioles helps regulate blood pressure 80 Venous Blood Flow • not a direct result of heart action • dependent on • skeletal muscle contraction • breathing • venoconstriction 81 Pulmonary Circuit • consists of vessels that carry blood from the heart to the lungs and back to the heart 82 Blood Flow Through Alveoli • cells of alveolar wall are tightly joined together • the high osmotic pressure of the interstitial fluid draws water out of them 83 Systemic Circuit • composed of vessels that lead from the heart to all body parts (except the lungs) and back to the heart • includes the aorta and its branches • includes the system of veins that return blood to the right atrium 84 Major Vessels of Arterial System 85 Abdominal Aorta and Its Major Branches 86 Arteries to Neck, Head, and Brain 87 Cerebral Arterial Circle • Circle of Willis • formed by anterior and posterior cerebral arteries, which join the internal carotid arteries 88 Arteries to Shoulder and Upper Limb 89 Arteries to the Lower Limb 90 Major Vessels of the Venous System 91 Major Veins of the Brain, Head and Neck 92 Veins from the Upper Limb and Shoulder 93 Veins That Drain the Thoracic Wall 94 Veins That Drain the Abdominal Viscera 95 Veins of the Lower Limb and Pelvis 96 Life-Span Changes • cholesterol deposition in blood vessels • heart enlargement • death of cardiac muscle cells • increase in fibrous connective tissue of the heart • increase in adipose tissue of the heart • increase in blood pressure • decrease in resting heart rate 97