CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM OVERVIEW
Transcription
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM OVERVIEW
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM OVERVIEW Primary components Primary functions Primary methods of regulation 1 Heart Tissue Layers Pulmonary trunk Fibrous pericardium Pericardium Myocardium Epicardium Myocardium Endocardium Heart chamber 2 Cardiac Muscle Syncytium Atrial vs. ventricular Intercalated discs Gap junctions Fig. 9-2 3 Cardiac Muscle 4 Action Potentials in Cardiac Muscle Voltage gated fast Na+ channels activated Na+ channels inactivated; slow Ca2+ channels activated; K+ permeability decreases Na+/Ca2+ channels close; K+ permeability increases Ion restoration Na+ / K + ion pump Ca2+ pumps Fig. 9-3 5 Membrane Permeability to Na+, K+, Ca2+ 6 Transverse Tubule Role Ca2+ enters via T-tubule Activates calcium release channels in SR Ryanodine receptor channels Strengthens contractions 7 True or false: APs in cardiac muscle are the same as those in neurons and skeletal muscle. A) True B) False 8 Which of these characteristics of cardiac muscle allow for near-simultaneous contraction of all cardiomyocytes? A) AP plateau B) Gap junctions syncytium C) Ryanodine receptors D) Drop in permeability to K+ 9 Cardiac Cycle Fig. 9-5 10 True or false: Isovolumic contraction and isovolumic relaxation involve rapid increases and decreases in pressure, respectively. A) True B) False 11 Regulation of Heart Pumping Frank-Starling Mechanism (intrinsic regulation) Increased inflow increased output Stretch-mediated contraction of cardiomyocytes 12 Regulation of Heart Pumping Autonomic Control of Heart Pumping Chronotropy vs. Inotropy Sympathetic vs. parasympathetic Cardiovascular center of medulla oblongata Fig 9-11 13 Sympathetic Regulation Cardioacceleratory center Increases Heart Rate SA discharge & conduction Increases inotropy Overall increase in cardiac output: >100% CO = HR * SV 14 Parasympathetic Regulation Cardioinhibitory center Vagus nerve Vagal tone Decreases SA rhythm & AV excitability 15 Autonomic Regulation Effect on cardiac output with sympathetic stimulus with parasympathetic stimulus Fig. 9-11 16 Chemical Regulation of Heart Pumping Ions Potassium (K+) Excess Decreases heart rate (depolarization) Blocks conduction Weakens heart Calcium (Ca2+) Excess Spastic contractions Involvement in myofilament contraction 17 Which of the following is not an example of extrinsic regulation? A) Sympathetic control of heart rate B) Vagal tone in heart rhythm C) Excess K+ ions in extracellular fluid D) Frank-Starling mechanism 18 CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM ELECTRICAL CONDUCTION Rhythmical Excitation of the Heart Electrical Conduction System 19 Establishment of Heart Rate Intrinsic cardiac conduction system Autorhythmic cells (self-exciting) Non-contractile Relay action potentials Spontaneous depolarization Unstable resting potentials 20 Spontaneous Depolarization Leaky Na+ channels: unstable resting potential Na+ continually leaks in (K+ outflow reduced) Reaches threshold Fast Na+ & Ca2+ channels open Repolarization K+ permeability, Na+ & Ca2+ permeability Fig. 10-2 21 Autorhythmicity of certain cardiac cells is due primarily to which ions channels? A) Ca2+ B) Cl C) K+ D) Na+ 22 Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System Sinoatrial (SA) node Depolarization rate 70-80x/min: Pacemaker R atrium L atrium via gap junctions R atrium AV node via internodal pathways Fig. 10-1 23 Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System Atrioventricular (AV) node Brief signal slowing Autorhythmic (40-60x/min) Fig. 10-1 24 Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System Atrioventricular bundle Bundle of His Only “electrical” connection between atria & ventricles Fig. 10-1 25 Atrioventricular Junction & Conduction Delay Fig. 10-3 26 Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System Bundle branches (L & R) Fig. 10-1 27 Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System Purkinje fibers Large fibers / fast transmission Contraction direction: apex atria Autorhythmic (15-40x/min) Fig. 10-1 28 Intrinsic Conduction Rates Total conduction time 0.22 sec SA node AV node AV node AV bundle 0.03 sec 0.04 sec delay Allows atria to contract 0.16 sec before ventricles AV bundle through ventricles Fig. 10-4 0.03 - 0.06 sec 29 Electrical signals move from the atria to the ventricles via which of these structures? A) SA node B) AV node C) AV bundle D) Bundle branches 30 CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM ELECTROCARDIOGRAMS 31 Electrocardiograms (ECG/EKG) Graphical recording of electrical changes during heart activity Heart generates electrical currents Transmitted through body Monitor to evaluate heart function See Fig. 11-1 32 Electrocardiogram & Voltage Fig. 11-2 33 Normal Electrocardiogram P wave Electrical potential from depolarization of atria ~0.1-0.3 mV; PQ interval ~ 0.16s Fig. 11-1 34 Normal Electrocardiogram QRS wave Electrical potential from depolarization of ventricles ~ 1 mV; RR interval ~0.83s, ~72bpm Fig. 11-1 35 Normal Electrocardiogram T wave Electrical potential from repolarization of ventricles Slower less amplitude than QRS ~ 0.2-0.3 mV; QT interval ~0.35s Fig. 11-1 36 Ventricular vs. ECG Potentials Fig. 11-3 37 Current Flow Around the Heart Ventricles provide greatest influence Ventricular septum 1st to depolarize; outer Fig. 11-5 ventricular walls last 38 Current Flow & Voltage Fig. 11-4 39 Measurements Using Bipolar Limb Leads Bipolar = electrocardiogram recorded from 2 electrodes on different sides of heart Fig. 11-6 40 Measurements Using Bipolar Limb Leads Based on work of Einthoven Einthoven’s triangle Einthoven’s law Fig. 11-6 41 Chest (Precordial) Leads Six standard chest leads Leads very close to heart surface Useful for identifying ventricular abnormalities Attached to positive terminal Measure one lead at a time RA, LA, LL all attached to negative terminal Fig. 11-8,9 42 Cardiac Arrhythmias Arrhythmia = abnormal rhythm of the heart Typically due to defects in cardiac conduction system 43 Abnormal Sinus Rhythms Tachycardia Increased heart rate (>100-150 bpm) Causes Sympathetic stimulation Increased body temp (fever) Increased metabolism 18 beats / °C Fig. 13-1 44 Abnormal Sinus Rhythms Bradycardia Depressed heart rate <60 bpm) Causes Increased heart strength (fitness) Larger stroke volume per beat fewer beats required Vagal stimulation (parasympathetic) Fig. 13-2 45 Abnormal Rhythms from Conduction System Blockages Sinoatrial (SA) block Prevents atrial contraction Loss of P wave AV node sets rhythm Decreased heart rate Fig. 13-4 46 Abnormal sinus rhythm looks like what on an ECG? A) Long R-R intervals B) Long Q-T intervals C) Short Q-T intervals D) Irregular R-R intervals 47 Abnormal Rhythms from Conduction System Blockages Atrioventricular (AV) block Causes Ischemia of AV node or bundle fibers Compression of AV bundle Scarring Inflammation of AV node or bundle Lack of blood (coronary insufficiency) Depresses conductivity Extreme vagal stimulation 48 Abnormal Rhythms from Conduction System Blockages Atrioventricular (AV) block Effects First degree blockage Increased P-R interval Fig. 13-5 49 Abnormal Rhythms from Conduction System Blockages Atrioventricular (AV) block Effects First degree blockage Second degree blockage Dropped beats Fig. 13-6 50 Abnormal Rhythms from Conduction System Blockages Atrioventricular (AV) block Effects First degree blockage Second degree blockage Third degree (complete) blockage Dissociation of P-QRS complex Ventricles contract at slower rate (AV pace) Fig. 13-7 51 Ventricular Fibrillation Uncoordinated signals Out-of-sequence / incomplete contractions Large areas contracting simultaneously Blood not pumped Typically fatal if not stopped within 2-3 min Typical causes Electrical shock Ischemia of heart muscle Fig. 13-16 52 Ventricular Fibrillation Defibrillation Apply electric shock (~100 V AC or 1000 V DC) Simultaneously depolarize entire myocardium Interrupt twitching and reestablish sinus rhythm Fig. 13-17 53 Which condition could cause death fastest if left untreated? A) Atrial fibrillation B) Ventricular fibrillation C) Bradycardia D) Tachycardia 54 CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM INTRODUCTION TO CIRCULATION 55 Circulation Blood distribution Cross sectional areas Arterial Capillaries ~62.5 cm2 ~2,500 cm2 Venous ~338 cm2 Fig. 14-1 56 Circulation Arterial system Elastic Conductance vessels Expand and recoil Aorta, large arteries Resistance vessels Small arteries, arterioles Regulate flow 57 Arterial System 58 Circulation Venous system Capacitance vessels Accommodate blood volume Major blood reservoir 59 Venous System 60 Venous Valves Fig. 15-11 61 Circulation Capillaries Site of exchange Fluids, nutrients, ions, wastes, etc. Simple squamous epithelium Continuous vs. fenestrated vs. sinusoidal 62 Circulation Capillary beds Flow regulated through sphincter muscles Allow shunting of blood to areas needed Autonomic control See Fig. 17-3 63 Which layer is common to arteries, veins, and capillaries? A) Internal elastic lamina B) External elastic lamina C) Tunica externa D) Endothelium 64 Blood Pressure Fig. 14-2 65 Circulatory Biophysics Flow is proportional to the Change in Pressure / Resistance Fig. 14-3 66 Resistance vs. Conductance Fig. 14-8 Poiseuille’s Law Flow = p*DPressure*r4 8*viscosity*length 4 pDPr Flow = 8hl 67 Blood Pressure Relationship between vessel area, flow rate and pressure Vessel Aorta CS area Flow Rate (cm2) (cm/sec) Mean Pressure (mmHg) 2.5 33 100 Capillaries 2,500 0.03 17 Vena cava 8 10 0 Fig. 14-9 68 Types of Flow Fig. 14-2 Laminar flow Turbulent flow Turbulence = Velocity * diameter * density viscosity ndr Turbulence = h 69 Resistance in Series vs. Parallel Circuits Fig. 14-9 Series Parallel Series Parallel Rtotal = R1 + R2 + R3 + R4… 1 Rtotal 1 + 1 + 1 + 1 = R R2 R3 R4 1 70 Autoregulation Attenuates effect of arterial pressure on tissue blood flow (perfusion) Involves locally acting factors Metabolic theory Myogenic theory 71 Vascular Distensibility & Compliance Distensibility = ability to expand and accommodate increased pressure or volume D Volume D Pressure * Initial Volume VD = Veins ~8x more distensible than arteries Thinner / weaker walls Can expand and accommodate more volume 72 Vascular Distensibility & Compliance Compliance (capacitance) = total quantity of blood that a given portion of the circulation can store D Volume D Pressure VC = Veins more compliant than corresponding arteries Greater distensibility (~8x) and larger volume (~3x) ~24x more compliant 73 Vascular Distensibility & Compliance Volume-pressure curves: Arterial vs. venous See Fig 15-1 (ELMO/textbook) 74 Vascular Distensibility & Compliance Delayed compliance Stress-relaxation of vessels 75 Pulse Pressure Arterial pressure pulsations Pulse pressure = Systolic BP – Diastolic BP Stroke volume & compliance Fig. 15-4 76 Pulse Pressure Damping Fig. 15-6 77 Venous Pressure Fig. 15-9 Fig. 15-10 78 Regulation of Blood Pressure 79 Blood Pressure Force exerted on the wall of a blood vessel by the blood within it MAP = CO x TPR Where: MAP = Mean Arterial Pressure, mmHg CO = Cardiac Output, mL/min TPR = Total Peripheral Resistance (units?) 80 Regulation of Blood Pressure and Flow Approaches to control Alter blood distribution Alter vessel diameter Timing of control Acute Long-term Mechanisms of control Local, humoral, nervous, kidney Fig. 14-13 81 Local Control of Blood Flow Local metabolic rate drives blood flow Fig. 14-13 82 Local Control of Blood Flow Metabolic control Oxygen lack theory Vasodilator theory Adenosine? Endothelial-derived factors Nitric oxide Endothelin 83 Local Control of Blood Flow Long-term regulation Tissue vascularity (Fig 17-6: ELMO/textbook) 84 Acute local control of blood pressure and flow can be accomplished by all of the following except: A) Nitric oxide B) Metabolic control (autoregulation) C) Increased vascularity of tissue D) Endothelin 85 Humoral Control of Blood Pressure Vasoconstrictor agents Norepinephrine (1°) & epinephrine HR & BP (vasoconstriction by stimulation of receptors) Epinephrine may cause vasodilation (vessels with receptors) E.g., coronary arteries Antidiuretic hormone (ADH; vasopressin) Angiotensin II Endothelin 86 Humoral Control of Blood Pressure Vasodilator agents Bradykinin Arteriolar dilation Increased capillary permeability Histamine Released due to tissue damage or allergic reaction Mast cells and basophils Arteriolar dilation Incr. capillary permeability 87 Humoral Control of Blood Pressure Misc. ions & compounds Ca2+ K+ Stimulates smooth muscle contraction vasoconstriction Inhibits smooth muscle contraction vasodilation H+ (pH) [ H+ ] or intense [ H+ ] causes vasodilation 88 True or false: Humoral control of blood pressure and flow is usually specific to one particular capillary bed. A) True B) False 89 Nervous Regulation of Blood Pressure Vasomotor center Controls HR and vascular constriction Part of cardiovascular center Inferior pons and reticular substance of medulla Fig. 18-1 90 Vasomotor Center Vasoconstrictor area Sympathetic impulses to systemic blood vessels Innervates nearly all blood vessels except capillaries Sets “sympathetic tone” of blood vessels (vasomotor tone) Fig. 18-1 91 Vasomotor Center Vasomotor tone Fig. 18-4 92 Vasomotor Center Vasodilator area Fibers project into vasoconstrictor area and inhibit vasoconstrictor activity Fig. 18-1 93 Vasomotor Center Sensory area Sensory signals from vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves Role in reflex control Fig. 18-1 94 Vasomotor Center Input from higher brain areas Fig. 18-3 95 The primary part of the cardiovascular control center responsible for vasomotor tone is the… A) Cardioacceleratory center B) Vasoconstrictor area C) Vasodilator area D) Sensory area 96 Rapid Control: Baroreceptor Reflexes Detects & responds to short-term BP changes Fig. 18-5 97 Baroreceptor Reflexes Effect of baroreceptors Fig. 18-7 98 Baroreceptor Reflexes Effect of baroreceptor denervation Fig. 18-8 99 Bainbridge Reflex Increased atrial pressure stretches SA node Direct result - increased HR (10-15%) Increases SA depolarization rate Indirect result - Bainbridge reflex Stimuli sent from SA node through vagal afferents to medulla Stimuli from medulla sent through vagal and sympathetic efferents back to SA node Increases HR (40-60%) Helps prevent damming of blood in veins, atria, pulmonary circulation 10 The Bainbridge reflex sensors are located in the… A) Carotid sinus B) Right atrium C) Aortic arch D) All of the above 101 Kidney Regulation of Arterial Pressure Renal-body fluid system for arterial pressure regulation Fig. 19-6 102 Renal Output Curve Pressure diuresis Pressure natriuresis Fig. 19-1 103 Kidney Regulation of Arterial Pressure Fig. 19-2 104 Kidney Regulation of Arterial Pressure Water/salt output must equal water/salt intake Infinite feedback gain principle Fig. 19-3 105 Infinite Feedback Gain Principle Example: increased arterial pressure H2O/Na+ intake remains constant but arterial pressure increases Renal output increases due to increased pressure Body will lose fluids/salts (blood volume drops) until pressure returns to equilibrium 2 1 Fig. 19-3 106 Infinite Feedback Gain Principle Example: decreased arterial pressure H2O/Na+ intake remains constant but arterial pressure decreases Renal output decreases due to decreased pressure Blood volume will rise (reabsorption) to bring pressure back to equilibrium Fig. 19-3 107 Long-term Changes to Arterial Pressure Renal output Abnormal kidney function Salt/water intake Fig. 19-4 108 Kidneys respond to increased mean arterial pressure by… A) Increasing urine volume (urine output) B) Reducing urine volume (urine output) C) Increasing urine osmolality D) Decreasing urine osmolality 109 The physiological basis for the result of the previous question is that higher arterial pressure causes… A) increased filtration B) reduced reabsorption C) increased secretion of sodium, with water following by osmosis D) all of the above 110 Hypertension High blood pressure Mean arterial pressure > 110 Systolic pressure > 135 Diastolic pressure > 90 May lead to shortened life expectancy Excess workload on heart Vessel rupture (stroke) Kidney damage - glomerulosclerosis (failure) 111 Hypertension Volume-loading hypertension Excess accumulation of extracellular fluids due to… Decreased renal mass Increased salt levels 112 Volume-loading Hypertension Fig. 19-9 113 Pressure Control via Renin-Angiotensin System Fig. 19-10 114 Pressure Control via Renin-Angiotensin System Effect of angiotensin II Vasoconstricting agent Direct action on kidney Salt & water retention Indirect action on kidney Stimulates aldosterone release from adrenal cortex Increases salt & water retention by kidneys Fig. 19-10 115 Pressure Control via Renin-Angiotensin System Effect of angiotensin levels Fig. 19-11 116 “The College Try” The pepperoni pizza challenge (increased Na+ intake) Relative to infinite feedback gain principle Fig. 19-3 117 “The College Try” The pepperoni pizza challenge (increased Na+ intake) Relative to infinite feedback gain principle Relative to the renin-angiotensin mechanism Fig. 19-12 118 What is the primary controller of long-term arterial pressure? A) Local factors B) Humoral factors C) Nervous system D) Kidneys 119 What is the primary controller of short-term arterial pressure? A) Local factors B) Humoral factors C) Nervous system D) Kidneys 120 What is the primary controller of short-term capillary bed blood flow? A) Local factors B) Humoral factors C) Nervous system D) Kidneys 121 Coronary Circulation 122 Ischemic Heart Disease Atherosclerosis Cholesterol deposited beneath arterial endothelium forms plaques Fibrous tissue invasion; calcification Protrude into lumen and restrict blood flow May rupture: Rough surfaces cause clots Thrombus vs. embolus Common sites Coronary arteries 123 Ischemic Heart Disease May lead to myocardial infarction Infarction = sudden loss in blood flow to point where myocardial cells cannot sustain function Acute infarction Tissue recovery Zones surrounding point of occlusion Replacement of dead cells with fibrous tissue Hypertrophy of healthy tissue Ischemia/reperfusion injury Fig. 21-8 124 Ischemic Heart Disease Accommodation by collateral coronary circulation Form anastomoses Fig. 21-6 125 Ischemic Heart Disease Major causes of death after acute infarction Decreased cardiac output Peripheral ischemia (cardiac shock) May involve systolic stretch Fig. 21-7 126 Ischemic Heart Disease Major causes of death after acute infarction Decreased cardiac output Blood damming in venous system Inefficient pumping of heart Leads to pulmonary edema Plasma from pulmonary capillaries perfuses into alveoli Decreased O2/CO2 exchange Tissues (heart) weaken 127 Ischemic Heart Disease Major causes of death after acute infarction Decreased cardiac output Blood damming in venous system Rupture of infarcted areas Dead tissues degenerate, weaken, rupture 128 Ischemic Heart Disease Major causes of death after acute infarction Decreased cardiac output Blood damming in venous system Rupture of infarcted areas Fibrillation 129 What do all the four causes of death following myocardial ischemia have in common? A) They all can only result from atherosclerosis developing over time. B) They all involve weakening or death of cardiomyocytes. C) They all involve other organs (lungs, kidneys) 130