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The Heart Video
  VR SCI 040
Heart Glossary

    • Your assignment is to create a
      HEART GLOSSARY.
      – The glossary should contain
        all of the structures of the
        heart.
      – Your Glossary Should also
        include a labeled diagram of
        the heart.
How The Heart Works
The Heart
  • Structure of the heart
     – 4 chambers
        • 2 upper atria
        • 2 lower ventricles
        • Each pair of chambers is separated
          by a septum
     – Heart wall
        • Major portion is the myocardium-
          cardiac muscle
        • Inner surfaces lined with
          endocardium
        • Outer surfaces lined with
          pericardium
External Heart Anatomy
The heart cont’d.

    • Heart valves
      – Atrioventricular valves
         • Lie between the atrium and
           ventricle on each side
         • Mitral (bicuspid) valve-
           between the left atrium and
           left ventricle
         • Tricuspid valve- between the
           right atrium and right
           ventricle
The heart cont’d.

 • Heart valves
   – Semilunar valves
      • Between the ventricle and great
        vessel on each side
      • Aortic valve-between the left
        ventricle and aorta
      • Pulmonary valve-between the
        right ventricle and the
        pulmonary artery
   – Valves control the flow of blood
     through the heart
Internal view of the heart
The heart cont’d.
• Passage of blood through the heart
   – Superior and inferior vena cavae bring O2-poor blood
     to the right atrium
   – Blood flows through tricuspid valve to right ventricle
   – From right ventricle blood passes through the
     pulmonary valve to the pulmonary artery
   – Blood picks up oxygen in the lungs and returns to
     the heart through the pulmonary veins
   – Pulmonary veins empty oxygenated blood into the
     left atrium
   – Blood flows through the mitral valve to the left
     ventricle
   – From the left ventricle blood flows through the aortic
     valve to the aorta
   – Aorta carries blood out to the body
The heart cont’d.
   • Blood flow through the heart cont’d.
      – The heart is actually 2 pumps
         • Right side is the pulmonary pump
              – Pumps deoxygenated blood to
                pulmonary circuit and lungs
         • Left side is the systemic pump
              – Pumps oxygenated blood out to
                systemic circulation
      – Note that deoxygenated and oxygenated
        blood never mix
      – Left ventricle pumps blood under higher
        pressure
         • Left ventricular wall is more muscular
The heart cont’d.
Cardiac Cycle
Cardiac Cycle
• The heartbeat
   – The events of each heartbeat are called the cardiac
     cycle
       • Highly coordinated so that both atria contract
         together and then both ventricles contract
         together
       • Systole- ventricular contraction of heart muscle
       • Diastole-ventricular relaxation of heart muscle
   – Normal heart rate at rest is about 60-80
     beats/minute
   – “Lub dup” heart sounds are produced by turbulence
     and tissue vibration as valves close
       • “lub” sound occurs as atrioventricular valves
         (AV) close
       • “dup” sound occurs as semilunar valves close
   – Other abnormal sounds are referred to as heart
     murmurs
Systole & Diastole
Stages
in the
cardiac
cycle
semilunar
valves
             aorta



             pulmonary
             vein
             left
             atrium
             left
             ventricle

     a.
 right
 ventricle
semilunar
valves
                   aorta



                   pulmonary
                   vein
                   left
                   atrium
                   left
                   ventricle

     a.
 right
 ventricle   pulmonary
             arteries          aorta




                               atrioventricular
                               valves



                  b.
semilunar                      superior
valves                         vena cava
                   aorta



                   pulmonary
                   vein        right
                   left        atrium
                   atrium
                   left
                   ventricle                c.
                                                   inferior
     a.                                            vena cava
 right
 ventricle   pulmonary
             arteries                      aorta




                                           atrioventricular
                                           valves



                  b.
Conduction system of the heart
     • Intrinsic control of heartbeat
        – Heart has its own intrinsic
          conduction system
        – Nodal tissue-2 areas in the
          heart
            • Has both muscular and
              nervous characteristics
            • Can generate action
              potentials to cause
              contraction
            • SA node and AV node
Conduction system of the heart
Conduction system of the heart
Control of Heartbeat
Control of Heartbeat
Control of Heartbeat
Control of Heartbeat
•   When the SA node "fires", the nerve impulse spreads
    quickly over both atria, causing the atrial muscles to
    contract. The impulse then reaches a second node of
    tissue, the atrioventricular node (AV node), located in
    the septum between the ventricles but in contact with
    the lower portion of the right atrium. The stimulation of
    the AV node causes nerve impulses to be sent down
    the bundle of nerve fibers, known as the Bundle of His.
    The Bundle of His branches into a pair of nerve fibers
    through the septum and circling around the base of
    each ventricle. The impulse started in the SA node and
    picked up by the AV node reaches the muscles of the
    ventricles and causes them to contract.
•   The heart has special muscle fibers called Purkinje
    fibers that conduct impulses five times more rapidly
    than surrounding cells. The Purkinje fibers form a
    pathway for conduction of the impulse that ensures that
    the heart muscle cells contract in the most efficient
    pattern.
Control of Heartbeat

• Extrinsic control of the heartbeat
   – Cardiac control center in the medulla has
     inputs to heart through the ANS
   – Parasympathetic stimulation causes a
     decrease in heart rate
   – Sympathetic stimulation causes an
     increase in heart rate and contractility
   – Hormones also can control heartbeat
       • Epinephrine and norepinephrine
         cause increased heart rate
       • Occurs during exercise, “fight or flight”
         response
The Electrocardiogram
 – An electrocardiograph is an
   instrument that is used to measure
   electrical activity in the heart. It
   measures changes in electrical
   potential across the heart and can
   detect the contraction pulses that
   pass over the surface of the heart.
   The resulting record is called an
   electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG).
 – The EKG shows three slow, negative
   changes, known as P, R, and T.
   Positive deflections are the Q and S
   waves.
Electrocardiogram




•P wave- atrial depolarization (prior to atrial contraction)
•QRS complex- ventricular depolarization (just prior to
ventricular contraction
•T wave- ventricular repolarization (ventricles are
recovering from contraction)
Conduction system of the heart




 •P wave- atrial depolarization (prior to atrial contraction)
 •QRS complex- ventricular depolarization (just prior to
 ventricular contraction
 •T wave- ventricular repolarization (ventricles are
 recovering from contraction)
The Vascular Pathways
The Vascular Pathways
  • The pulmonary circuit
     – Right ventricle pumps deoxygenated
       blood to pulmonary artery
     – Branches into left and right
       pulmonary arteries that go to the
       lungs
     – Within the lungs blood is distributed
       to alveolar capillaries
     – Oxygen diffuses into the blood and
       carbon dioxide diffuses out
     – Oxygenated blood now travels
       through pulmonary veins to the left
       atrium
The Vascular Pathways cont’d.
  • The systemic circuit
     – Oxygenated blood is pumped from the left
       ventricle to the aorta
     – Aorta distributes blood through the
       systemic arteries
     – As blood travels through the systemic
       capillaries it drops off oxygen and picks up
       carbon dioxide
     – The deoxygenated blood is returned by
       venules and then veins to the vena cavae
     – The inferior vena cava drains the body
       below the chest
     – The superior vena cava collects blood from
       the head, chest, and arms
     – Blood is returned to the right atrium
Cardiovascular
System Diagram
Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure
  • Blood pressure is defined as the
    force of blood against the walls of
    arteries.
  • The pressure in any artery varies
    as a result of two major factors.
     – 1.  Cardiac Output
            o Volume of blood.
            o Heart rate
     – 2. Arteriolar Resistance
            o Size
            o Elasticity
Blood Pressure
• Measuring Blood Pressure
  Two different pressures are measured and
  compared in a blood pressure reading.
  o Systolic pressure
  o Diastolic pressure
• Blood pressure is measured using a device
  called a sphygmomanometer.
  o Normal blood pressure is less than 130 mm
  Hg systolic and less than 85 mm Hg diastolic.
  o Optimal blood pressure is less than 120 mm
  Hg systolic and less than 80 mm Hg diastolic.
  o A typical reading for a healthy adult is
  120/70
Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure in the Vessels
• Blood pressure in the Capillaries
   – The pressure of arterial blood is
     significantly reduced when the blood
     enters the capillaries.
• Blood pressure in the veins
   – When blood leaves the capillaries and
     enters the venules and veins, little
     pressure remains to force it along.
• Blood pressure in the Arteries
   – Blood pressure is the greatest in these
     vessels because the heart has just
     pumped the blood.
Exchanges between Blood and Cells
  • Our blood does not come into direct contact
    with the cells it nourishes.
  • When blood enters the arteriole end of a
    capillary, some components filter through the
    walls of the capillaries into the tissue space.
    This fluid, called interstitial fluid, is blood
    plasma minus most of the proteins.
  • Substances in the fluid can enter the cells by
    diffusion or active transport. Substances, like
    carbon dioxide, can diffuse out of cells and
    into the interstitial fluid.
  • Near the venous end of a capillary, the blood
    pressure is greatly reduced. Here the osmotic
    pressure causes fluid to re-enters the
    capillary at the venous end.
Hypertension
 • High blood pressure or hypertension is defined
   in an adult as a blood pressure greater than or
   equal to 140 mm Hg systolic pressure or greater
   than or equal to 90 mm Hg diastolic pressure.
 • Risk Factors You Can Control
    – Smoking         - Physical Inactivity
    – Obesity                - Diet (Salt Intake)
    – Diabetes        - Stress
 • Risk Factors You Can’t Control
    – Age
    – Ethnicity (South Asians, First
      Nations/Aboriginal Peoples or Inuit and
      Blacks are at increased risk)
    – Family history
Regulation of Blood Pressure
Heart Dissection
The Heart

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The Heart

  • 1.
  • 2. The Heart Video VR SCI 040
  • 3. Heart Glossary • Your assignment is to create a HEART GLOSSARY. – The glossary should contain all of the structures of the heart. – Your Glossary Should also include a labeled diagram of the heart.
  • 4.
  • 6. The Heart • Structure of the heart – 4 chambers • 2 upper atria • 2 lower ventricles • Each pair of chambers is separated by a septum – Heart wall • Major portion is the myocardium- cardiac muscle • Inner surfaces lined with endocardium • Outer surfaces lined with pericardium
  • 8. The heart cont’d. • Heart valves – Atrioventricular valves • Lie between the atrium and ventricle on each side • Mitral (bicuspid) valve- between the left atrium and left ventricle • Tricuspid valve- between the right atrium and right ventricle
  • 9. The heart cont’d. • Heart valves – Semilunar valves • Between the ventricle and great vessel on each side • Aortic valve-between the left ventricle and aorta • Pulmonary valve-between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery – Valves control the flow of blood through the heart
  • 10. Internal view of the heart
  • 11. The heart cont’d. • Passage of blood through the heart – Superior and inferior vena cavae bring O2-poor blood to the right atrium – Blood flows through tricuspid valve to right ventricle – From right ventricle blood passes through the pulmonary valve to the pulmonary artery – Blood picks up oxygen in the lungs and returns to the heart through the pulmonary veins – Pulmonary veins empty oxygenated blood into the left atrium – Blood flows through the mitral valve to the left ventricle – From the left ventricle blood flows through the aortic valve to the aorta – Aorta carries blood out to the body
  • 12. The heart cont’d. • Blood flow through the heart cont’d. – The heart is actually 2 pumps • Right side is the pulmonary pump – Pumps deoxygenated blood to pulmonary circuit and lungs • Left side is the systemic pump – Pumps oxygenated blood out to systemic circulation – Note that deoxygenated and oxygenated blood never mix – Left ventricle pumps blood under higher pressure • Left ventricular wall is more muscular
  • 15. Cardiac Cycle • The heartbeat – The events of each heartbeat are called the cardiac cycle • Highly coordinated so that both atria contract together and then both ventricles contract together • Systole- ventricular contraction of heart muscle • Diastole-ventricular relaxation of heart muscle – Normal heart rate at rest is about 60-80 beats/minute – “Lub dup” heart sounds are produced by turbulence and tissue vibration as valves close • “lub” sound occurs as atrioventricular valves (AV) close • “dup” sound occurs as semilunar valves close – Other abnormal sounds are referred to as heart murmurs
  • 18. semilunar valves aorta pulmonary vein left atrium left ventricle a. right ventricle
  • 19. semilunar valves aorta pulmonary vein left atrium left ventricle a. right ventricle pulmonary arteries aorta atrioventricular valves b.
  • 20. semilunar superior valves vena cava aorta pulmonary vein right left atrium atrium left ventricle c. inferior a. vena cava right ventricle pulmonary arteries aorta atrioventricular valves b.
  • 21. Conduction system of the heart • Intrinsic control of heartbeat – Heart has its own intrinsic conduction system – Nodal tissue-2 areas in the heart • Has both muscular and nervous characteristics • Can generate action potentials to cause contraction • SA node and AV node
  • 22. Conduction system of the heart
  • 23. Conduction system of the heart
  • 27. Control of Heartbeat • When the SA node "fires", the nerve impulse spreads quickly over both atria, causing the atrial muscles to contract. The impulse then reaches a second node of tissue, the atrioventricular node (AV node), located in the septum between the ventricles but in contact with the lower portion of the right atrium. The stimulation of the AV node causes nerve impulses to be sent down the bundle of nerve fibers, known as the Bundle of His. The Bundle of His branches into a pair of nerve fibers through the septum and circling around the base of each ventricle. The impulse started in the SA node and picked up by the AV node reaches the muscles of the ventricles and causes them to contract. • The heart has special muscle fibers called Purkinje fibers that conduct impulses five times more rapidly than surrounding cells. The Purkinje fibers form a pathway for conduction of the impulse that ensures that the heart muscle cells contract in the most efficient pattern.
  • 28. Control of Heartbeat • Extrinsic control of the heartbeat – Cardiac control center in the medulla has inputs to heart through the ANS – Parasympathetic stimulation causes a decrease in heart rate – Sympathetic stimulation causes an increase in heart rate and contractility – Hormones also can control heartbeat • Epinephrine and norepinephrine cause increased heart rate • Occurs during exercise, “fight or flight” response
  • 29. The Electrocardiogram – An electrocardiograph is an instrument that is used to measure electrical activity in the heart. It measures changes in electrical potential across the heart and can detect the contraction pulses that pass over the surface of the heart. The resulting record is called an electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG). – The EKG shows three slow, negative changes, known as P, R, and T. Positive deflections are the Q and S waves.
  • 30. Electrocardiogram •P wave- atrial depolarization (prior to atrial contraction) •QRS complex- ventricular depolarization (just prior to ventricular contraction •T wave- ventricular repolarization (ventricles are recovering from contraction)
  • 31. Conduction system of the heart •P wave- atrial depolarization (prior to atrial contraction) •QRS complex- ventricular depolarization (just prior to ventricular contraction •T wave- ventricular repolarization (ventricles are recovering from contraction)
  • 32.
  • 34. The Vascular Pathways • The pulmonary circuit – Right ventricle pumps deoxygenated blood to pulmonary artery – Branches into left and right pulmonary arteries that go to the lungs – Within the lungs blood is distributed to alveolar capillaries – Oxygen diffuses into the blood and carbon dioxide diffuses out – Oxygenated blood now travels through pulmonary veins to the left atrium
  • 35. The Vascular Pathways cont’d. • The systemic circuit – Oxygenated blood is pumped from the left ventricle to the aorta – Aorta distributes blood through the systemic arteries – As blood travels through the systemic capillaries it drops off oxygen and picks up carbon dioxide – The deoxygenated blood is returned by venules and then veins to the vena cavae – The inferior vena cava drains the body below the chest – The superior vena cava collects blood from the head, chest, and arms – Blood is returned to the right atrium
  • 38. Blood Pressure • Blood pressure is defined as the force of blood against the walls of arteries. • The pressure in any artery varies as a result of two major factors. – 1.  Cardiac Output o Volume of blood. o Heart rate – 2. Arteriolar Resistance o Size o Elasticity
  • 39. Blood Pressure • Measuring Blood Pressure Two different pressures are measured and compared in a blood pressure reading. o Systolic pressure o Diastolic pressure • Blood pressure is measured using a device called a sphygmomanometer. o Normal blood pressure is less than 130 mm Hg systolic and less than 85 mm Hg diastolic. o Optimal blood pressure is less than 120 mm Hg systolic and less than 80 mm Hg diastolic. o A typical reading for a healthy adult is 120/70
  • 41. Blood Pressure in the Vessels • Blood pressure in the Capillaries – The pressure of arterial blood is significantly reduced when the blood enters the capillaries. • Blood pressure in the veins – When blood leaves the capillaries and enters the venules and veins, little pressure remains to force it along. • Blood pressure in the Arteries – Blood pressure is the greatest in these vessels because the heart has just pumped the blood.
  • 42. Exchanges between Blood and Cells • Our blood does not come into direct contact with the cells it nourishes. • When blood enters the arteriole end of a capillary, some components filter through the walls of the capillaries into the tissue space. This fluid, called interstitial fluid, is blood plasma minus most of the proteins. • Substances in the fluid can enter the cells by diffusion or active transport. Substances, like carbon dioxide, can diffuse out of cells and into the interstitial fluid. • Near the venous end of a capillary, the blood pressure is greatly reduced. Here the osmotic pressure causes fluid to re-enters the capillary at the venous end.
  • 43. Hypertension • High blood pressure or hypertension is defined in an adult as a blood pressure greater than or equal to 140 mm Hg systolic pressure or greater than or equal to 90 mm Hg diastolic pressure. • Risk Factors You Can Control – Smoking - Physical Inactivity – Obesity - Diet (Salt Intake) – Diabetes - Stress • Risk Factors You Can’t Control – Age – Ethnicity (South Asians, First Nations/Aboriginal Peoples or Inuit and Blacks are at increased risk) – Family history

Notas do Editor

  1. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close
  2. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close
  3. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close
  4. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close
  5. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close
  6. Recall the lub dubb sound is the result of the valves closing. The lub occurs when the AV valves close and the dubb occurs when the semilunar valves close