Sapolsky Chapter 3 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 45
About This Presentation
Title:

Sapolsky Chapter 3

Description:

Stroke, Heart Attack, and Voodoo ... May treat SNS-driven heart attack by gagging or massage of carotid arteries ... Even very good news can SNS heart attack. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:97
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 46
Provided by: psyc72
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Sapolsky Chapter 3


1
Sapolsky Chapter 3
  • Stroke, Heart Attack, and Voodoo Death

2
(No Transcript)
3
Heart has 4 chambers
  • Blood enters the right atrium from body and is
    squeezed into the right ventricle.
  • From there it goes to the lungs to be oxygenated.
  • It then goes to left atrium, which squeezes it
    into left ventricle.
  • From there the oxygenated blood is pumped to the
    body.

4
Contractions
  • The 2 atria contract simultaneously, sending
    blood to the ventricles.
  • The 2 ventricles then contract together, sending
    blood to the lungs or body.

5
(No Transcript)
6
  • What are the 2 numbers that designate blood
    pressure?
  • What is the difference between systolic and
    diastolic blood pressure?

7
  • The ventricular contraction is systole.
  • The time between ventricular contractions is
    diastole.
  • The heart is supplied with blood only during
    diastole.

8
  • The average human heart beats about 72
    times/minute at rest.
  • Hearts of well-conditioned athletes beat more
    slowly at rest.
  • Why is this an advantage?
  • How do they manage to pump more slowly and still
    send enough blood to the body?

9
How does it work?
  • The sino-atrial (SA) node (back of right atrium)
    generates an impulse ? atria contract.
  • This is carried to atrio-ventricular (AV) node,
    which delays the impulse before sending it to AV
    bundle.
  • Why is the delay important?

10
(No Transcript)
11
How does it work?
  • The delay allows the atria to empty before the
    ventricles contract.
  • The AV bundle fibers are very fast-conducting and
    innervate the bottom of the heart first.
  • Therefore, the contraction begins at the bottom
    of the ventricles and squirts the blood up
    through the appropriate arteries.

12
How does it work?
  • The heart fibers are all interconnected (called a
    syncytium).
  • When one fiber is excited, the action potential
    spreads to all of them.
  • Muscle is like neurons inflow of sodium (Na)
    and calcium (Ca) depolarizes it.

13
How does it work?
  • Heart tissue is self-excitatory.
  • Na and Ca slowly leak in.
  • The SA node has the fastest rate of
    self-excitation.
  • It excites the rest of the heart, and before the
    rest of the heart can re-excite itself, the SA
    node strikes again!
  • If SA is blocked, rest of heart contracts 15-40
    times/minute.

14
The Cardiovascular Stress Response
  • Get the heart to beat faster Increase SNS tone,
    decrease PNS tone
  • Norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (Epi)
    increase slow inflow of Na and Ca ? increase
    rate of re-excitation in SA node.
  • This Ca also increases contractility.
  • SNS terminals also excite AV node and whole
    myocardium enhances contractility everywhere.

15
PNS
  • Vagus nerve (via acetylcholine, ACh) decreases
    rate by decreasing the slow inflow of Na and
    Ca and by increasing the subsequent outflow of
    potassium (K).
  • Acts at SA and AV nodes.
  • May treat SNS-driven heart attack by gagging or
    massage of carotid arteries ? activate vagal
    reflexes ? PNS counteracts SNS.

16
Increase blood pressure
  • Sapolskys hose analogy
  • To squirt wateror blooda long way
  • Small diameter, relatively rigid hose.
  • Not 3 ft in diameter with consistency of a
    marshmallow.

17
(No Transcript)
18
Cardiovascular system
  • Arteries arterioles
  • Carry blood from heart to body
  • Wrapped with circular muscle
  • SNS causes muscle to tighten ? increase pressure
  • Veins venules return blood to the heart
  • Capillaries fine meshwork of vessels connecting
    arterial venous systems.

19
Arteries and veins
20
Capillaries
21
Capillaries
  • All exchanges of fluid, nutrients, and wastes
    between blood and tissue occur across capillary
    walls.
  • Capillary walls usually only 1 cell thick.
  • Only 1 blood cell at a time can pass through.

22
(No Transcript)
23
Lymphatic system
  • Fluid that passes from capillaries into tissue
    interstitial fluid
  • Some interstitial fluid is returned to blood in
    the venous side of the capillary system.
  • The rest accumulates in lymph vessels.
  • Lymph nodes along these vessels cleanse the lymph
    before returning it to veins.

24
What
25
What causes the fluid to return to the venules?
  • Increased pressure from fluid in tissue, compared
    to decreased pressure in the venous system.
  • Due to loss of so much fluid from capillaries.

26
Functions of the circulatory system
  • Transport oxygen and nutrients to tissues.
  • Remove wastes from tissues.

27
Why do we need adequate blood pressure?
  • Extrude plasma from leaky capillaries so it can
    deliver oxygen and nutrients and pick up wastes.
  • Pump blood against gravity to upper parts of
    body.

28
How does SNS direct blood to active muscles,
heart brain?
  • Relative distribution of alpha and beta
    adrenergic receptors.
  • NE ? alpha ? constricts blood vessels in
    nonactive muscles and relaxes intestines.
  • Epi ? beta ? increase heart rate, dilates vessels
    in active muscle.
  • Also, metabolites in active muscle dilate walls

29
Final trick Conserve fluid
  • How?
  • Kidney conserves water.
  • Vasopressin from posterior pituitary
  • Aldosterone from adrenal cortex

30
Kidney
31
Kidney actively retains water.
  • Blood pressure in glomerulus ? plasma to leave,
    carrying salt, glucose, amino acids other small
    molecules into Bowmans capsule collecting
    tubule.
  • This fluid is, for practical purposes, now
    outside the body ? urine
  • 180 liters/day!!!

32
How do we conserve the water?
  • Pump Na back into body.
  • Cl- follows passively electrical attraction
  • H2O follows passively osmotic pressure
  • Aldosterone (from adrenal cortex) increases Na
    pumping.
  • Vasopressin (ADH) inserts aquaporins into wall of
    tubule, which let H20 pass through.
  • When open, an aquaporin channel allows 3 billion
    molecules of water to pass through each second!!

33
What is diabetes insipidus?
  • Passing through insipidly
  • Lack of vasopressin (ADH) not enough aquaporins
    inserted ? pass 25 liters of urine/day!
  • Normally, only 1-2 liters/day

34
Chronic stress and cardiovascular disease
  • Repeated overuse ? damage to heart blood
    vessels (hose you buy from Sears)
  • Branching (bifurcation) of vessels ? turbulence
    at branch points ? damage to lining.
  • Fatty acids glucose work into lining,
    thickening it.
  • Fatty foam cells join the fray ? plaques

35
Chronic stress and cardiovascular disease
  • Epi from adrenal medulla ? platelets stickier
  • Potentially adaptive decrease bleeding
  • But also ? clots that stick to injured area
  • All of above ? atherosclerosis

36
Atherosclerosis
37
Atherosclerosis
  • Purely social stress ? atherosclerosis in mice
    and monkeys.
  • Jay Kaplan subordinate monkeys got
    atherosclerosis.
  • So did dominant males in unstable social groups
  • Even with low fat diet
  • Hot reactors were worst
  • Risk decreased with beta-blocker drugs

38
Definitions
  • Claudication blockage of blood flow to lower
    part of body.
  • Coronary artery disease decreased blood supply
    to heart.
  • Stroke blockage of blood supply to brain.

39
Sudden Cardiac Death
  • Ventricular arrhythmia ventricles contract too
    early or too late.
  • Ventricular fibrillation interconnected muscle
    fibers contract randomly, rather than all working
    together ? no blood pumped out of ventricles ?
    ischemia of heart.
  • Diseased muscle more excitable, may not wait for
    SA and AV nodes.

40
Fatal Pleasures
  • Even very good news can ? SNS ? heart attack.
  • Rage and ecstasy, grief and triumph all
    represent challenges to allostatic equilibrium.
  • Elie Wiesel The opposite of love is not hate.
    The opposite of love is indifference.

41
Voodoo Death
  • Psychophysiological death occurs when one gives
    up hope.
  • Disagreement whether due to massive PNS or
    massive SNS activity.

42
Personality cardiac disease
  • Individual differences in vulnerability to
    cardiac disease
  • Genetic factors
  • Life styles
  • Personality factors

43
Summary
  • Path of blood
  • Rt. Atrium ? Rt. Ventricle ? lungs ?
  • Left atrium ? left ventricle ? body
  • Timing of heart beats
  • Pacemaker Sinoatrial (SA) node
  • Delay Atrioventricular (AV) node
  • Fast AV bundle to bottom of ventricles

44
Summary
  • Stress
  • Epi NE ? Na Ca ? heart rate
    contractility
  • Plasma nutrients leak out of capillaries
    return either to venules or lymph system.
  • Kidney conserves H2O by pumping Na back into
    body Cl- H2O follow passively.
  • Aldosterone ? Na pumping
  • Vasopressin (ADH) aquaporins ? H2O flow

45
Summary
  • Chronic stress
  • High BP ? damage to vessels ? plaques ?
    atherosclerosis
  • Epi ? sticky platelets ? clotting
  • Major acute stress ? SNS ? ventricular
    fibrillation, especially if heart was previously
    damaged.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com