Individuals heart is about the size of the persons closed fist
3 Description of the Heart (Part 2)
Pericardial Sac
Fibrous pericardium
Serous pericardium
Parietal
Visceral
Pericardial cavity
Cardiac Wall
Epicardium Visceral pericardium
Myocardium Muscle layer
Endocardium Lining
Chambers
Valves
Clinical Applications
CPR
Cardiac tamponade
Pericarditis
Myocarditis
Endocarditis
4 Gross Anatomy of the Heart (Anterior Aspect) 5 Gross Anatomy of the Heart (Posterior Surface View) 6 Description of the Heart (Part 3)
Cardiac Chambers
Atria
Thin walls
Pectinate muscle
Separated by
Interatrial septum
Fossa (foramen) ovalis
Right
Receives oxygen depleted blood from body
Lowest blood pressure in body
Left
Receives oxygen enriched blood from lungs
Ventricles
Thick walls
Trabeculae carnae
Separated by Interventricular septum
Right
Receives blood from R. Atrium
7 Description of the Heart (Part 4)
Pumps blood to lungs
Left
Receives blood from L. atrium
Pumps blood to body
Highest blood pressure
Cardiac Valves
Structure
Cusp
Endocardium
Dense connective tissue
Chordae tendinae
Papillary muscle
Function
Prevent reverse flow
Location surface projection
Tricuspid
R. atrioventricular valve
R./L. 5th intercostal space, near sternum
Pulmonary semilunar
R. ventricle ? pulmonary trunk
L., 2nd intercostal space near sternum
8 Gross Anatomy of the Heart (Frontal Section) 9 Description of the Heart (Part 5)
Bicuspid (mitral)
L. atrioventricular
L., 5th intercostal space in midclavicular line
Aortic semilunar
L. ventricle ? aorta
R., 2nd intercostal space, near sternum
Great vessels of the Heart
10 Description of the Heart (Part 6)
Inferior vena cava (IVC)
Coronary sinus
Superior vena cava (SVC)
Pulmonary trunk Right ventricle
Pulmonary veins Left atrium
Aorta Left ventricle
11 Cardiac Conduction System (Part 1)
Specialized myocardial cells
Autorhythmic
Pacemaker
Conduction system
Pacemaker cells set up basic rhythm of contractions
Conduction system coordinates contraction of myocardial fibers
Conduction system components
Sinoatrial (SA) node
In R. atrium near SVC opening
Primary pacemaker
Impulse transmits to AV node
Maintains rhythm of 60-100 bpm
Atrioentricular (AV) node
In interatrial septum
Secondary pacemaker
Impulse transmits to AV bundle
12 The Intrinsic Conduction of the Heart and Succession of Action Potential Through Selected Areas 13 Cardiac Conduction System (Part 2)
Sets basic rhythm if SA node is not functioning
Maintains rhythm of 40-50
Atrioventricular bundle (Bundle of His)
Electrically links atria to ventricles
In septa
Impulse transmits to bundle branches
Maintains rhythm of 20-40
R.L. bundle branches
In interventricular septum
Impulses transmit to myoconduction fibers
Conduction myofibers (Pukinje fibers)
In ventricular walls
Impulses transmit to ventricular walls
Clinical applications
Artificial pacemakers
Bundle branch block
Complete
Right
Left
14 The Sequence of Excitation of the Heart Related to the Deflection Waves of an ECG Tracing 15 An Electrocardiogram (ECG) Tracing 16 Summary of Events Occurring in the Heart During the Cardiac Cycle 17 Cardiac Cycle (Part 1)
Events associated with one heart beat Lasts about 0.8 sec
R. L. sides
Acts simultaneously
Develop different pressures
Expel the same volume
Chambers fill passively
Atria contract while ventricles relax
Ventricles contract while atria relax
Systole Contraction phase
Asystole Relaxation phase
Phases
Relaxation (Quiescent) period
At end of heart beat lasts about 0.4 sec
All 4 chambers relaxed Pressure drops backflow of blood
Trapped by closing of semilunar cusps of vavles Dicrotic notch
18 Cardiac Cycle (Part 2)
All 4 valves closed Isovolumetric relaxation
Ventricular pressure lt atrial pressure AV valves open
Ventricular filling
Rapid ventricular filling Passive
Diastasis
Atrial systole Final 30mL 0.1 sec
End diastolic volume (EDV) about 130 mL
19 Cardiac Cycle (Part 3)
Ventricular systole
AV valves shut 1st heart sound
All 4 valves closed Isovolumetric contraction
Ventricular pressure rises
Semilunar valves open
Ventricular ejection 0.5 sec
Semilunar valves close 2nd heart sound
Systole begins
End systolic volume (ESV) 60 mL
Stroke volume EDV ESV
Cardiac output stroke volume x heart rate
20 Factors Involved in Regulation of Cardiac Output 21 Generalizing Structure of Arteries, Veins, and Capillaries
PowerShow.com is a leading presentation sharing website. It has millions of presentations already uploaded and available with 1,000s more being uploaded by its users every day. Whatever your area of interest, here you’ll be able to find and view presentations you’ll love and possibly download. And, best of all, it is completely free and easy to use.
You might even have a presentation you’d like to share with others. If so, just upload it to PowerShow.com. We’ll convert it to an HTML5 slideshow that includes all the media types you’ve already added: audio, video, music, pictures, animations and transition effects. Then you can share it with your target audience as well as PowerShow.com’s millions of monthly visitors. And, again, it’s all free.
About the Developers
PowerShow.com is brought to you by CrystalGraphics, the award-winning developer and market-leading publisher of rich-media enhancement products for presentations. Our product offerings include millions of PowerPoint templates, diagrams, animated 3D characters and more.