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Cardiovascular Anatomy and Physiology AFAMS Residency Orientation April 16, 2012 ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Heart Facts • • • • Human heart is 13 x 9 cm Weighs about 1 kg Beats 100, 000 times a day Pumps 7600 L of blood daily • Circulates blood completely about 1000 x a day • Pumps blood through 100,000 km of vessels • Cardiovascular Death is most common cause of death worldwide ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Purpose of Cardiovascular System • Deliver blood to tissues and organs – Nutrients – Oxygen • Remove used blood from organs and tissues – Deoxygenated hemoglobin • Deliver deoxygenated blood to lungs for reoxygenation ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiac Anatomy ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiac Anatomy ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiac Anatomy: Chambers • Right Atrium (RA) – Receives deoxygenated blood from venous circulation – Pumps blood to RV • Right Ventricle (RV) – Receives deoxygenated blood from RA – Pumps deoxygenated blood to lungs • Left Atrium (LA) – Receives oxygenated blood from pulmonary vein – Pumps blood to LV • Left Ventricle (LV) – Receives oxygenated blood from LA – Pumps oxygenated through aorta to body ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Gross Anatomy ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiac Anatomy: Valves • Classification – A-V valves • Tricuspid – Separates RA and RV • Mitral – Separates LA and LV – Systemic Valves • Aortic Aortic Valve – Separates LV and Aorta • Pulmonic – Separates RV and Pulmonary artery ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Mitral Valve Cardiac Anatomy: Outflow • Pulmonary Artery – Arising from Right Ventricle (RV) – Blood from RV to lungs • Aortic Arch – Arising from Left Ventricle (LV) – Blood from LV to body ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Normal Regional Circulation ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiac Anatomy: Coronary Arteries • Left Main (LM) • Left Anterior Descending (LAD) – Septal Perforating Branches – Diagonal Branches • Left Circumflex (LCx) – Obtuse Marginals • Right Coronary Artery (RCA) – Acute Marginals – Posterior Descending – Posterior Lateral Branch ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Coronary Anatomy LAO Caudal View LAO Cranial View LAD LM LM OM1 PDA D1 LCx RCA PLB ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Left Ventricular Volumes • End Diastolic Volume (EDV) – Volume of blood in LV and end diastole – Directly proportional to venous return • End Systolic Volume (ESV) – Volume of blood in LV at the end of systole (contraction) ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Left Ventricular Volumes • Stroke Volume (SV) – EDV - ESV • Ejection Fraction (EF) – SV/EDV – Normal resting EF: 60% • Best predictor of heart performance and heart disease prognosis – Normal exercising EF: 80% ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Left Ventricular Volumes ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiology Physiology • Cardiac Output (CO) – HR x SV • Cardiac Index (CI) – CO / BSA • Preload – Volume of blood in the left ventricle at end diastole – Dependent upon venous return and compliance of left ventricle • Afterload – Amount of resistance the heart has to overcome to pump blood forward • Mean Arterial Pressure ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Cardiology Physiology • Myocardial Contractility – Amount of force with which the heart contracts at a given preload – Dependent upon • • • • Sympathetic Nerve activity Catecholamines Myocardial mass Drugs ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Contractility • Increased Cardiac Contractility – – – – Exercise: increased sympathetic tone Catecholamines: epinephrine and norephinephrine Excitement / Fear: Fight of flight response Drugs: Digitalis and sympathomimetics • Decreased Cardiac Contractility – Loss of Contractile Mass: Secondary to myocardial infarction – Myocardial muscle disease: Cardiomyopathy – Drugs: anesthetics and barbituates ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Starling Curve • In a normal heart – Increasing preload (EDV or EDV) increases SV – Increasing contractility increases stroke volume at a constant preload ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Definitions • Systolic Blood Pressure (SBP): blood pressure in brachial artery during systole • Diastolic Blood Pressure (DBP): blood pressure in brachial artery during diastole • Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP): average blood pressure against the walls of the aorta throughout a complete cardiac cycle – MAP = [(2 x DBP) + SBP] / 3 ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Vascular Anatomy ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Abdominal Blood Supply Importance: • Surgical Procedures • Renal Artery Stenosis • Embolic Events to the GI tract • Watershed areas • Differential diagnosis of abdominal organ failure • Nutritional Implications ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Abdominal Blood Supply ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Vascular Anatomy of the Neck Importance: • Central Venous Access – Internal Jugular Vein – Subclavian Vein • Stroke – Carotid artery arteriosclerosis ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Neck Arteries ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Veins of the Neck ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Arteries of the Brain Importance: • Localizing site of stroke • Watershed areas • Localizing site of aneurysm • Importance of understanding cerebral perfusion ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Arteries of the Brain ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Arteries of the Brain 3D MRI with Gadolinium ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Gross Anatomy of Circle of Wilis Arm Vasculature Importance: • Placement of peripheral IVs • Central Venous Catheters – Brachial vein • Placement of radial arterial line ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Arm Vasculature ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Lower Extremity Vascular Anatomy • Importance: • Central Venous Catheter – Femoral Vein • Arterial Line – Femoral Arterial • Localizing Peripheral Arterial Disease ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Lower Extremity Vascular Anatomy ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES Lower Extremity Vascular Anatomy • Angiogram of Peripheral arterial Disease CFA: Common femoral artery DFA: Deep Femoral Artery SFA: Superficial Femoral Artery ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES STENT Conclusions • Presentation was brief overview of the cardiovascular system • Understanding vascular anatomy important for every doctor • Cardiovascular Disease is leading cause of death ARMED FORCES ACADEMY OF MEDICAL SCIENCES