Title: THE HEART
1THE HEART
2Heart Facts
- The heart pumps blood through an average of
60,000 miles of blood vessels in the body - At rest, it pumps about 5 liters to the lungs and
about 5 liters to the rest of the body every
minute. - It beats 100,000 time a day.
3Location
- Heart lies on the diaphragm.
- Located in the mediastinum.
- Tilted to the left 2/3rds of mass to the left
- Between ribs 2-6
4Transverse Section
5Anterior View
- Base is superior
- Apex is inferior
- Lies between lungs
6The Pericardium
- Membrane that surrounds heart-composed of three
layers one fibrous layer and one serous layer
that has two parts - Fibrous layer
- Dense irregular c.t.
- Prevents overstretching of heart, protects,
anchors heart in mediastinum through central
tendon - Serous layer-epithelial membrane
- Parietal layer-fused to fibrous layer
- Visceral layer-fused to heart also called the
epicardium - Review discussion of membranes in chapter 4
7Pericardium contd
- Pericardial fluid-slippery secretion produced by
the serous layer - Reduces friction between the layers of the
pericardium - Pericardial cavity
- The space between the parietal and visceral
layers of the serous periacardium - Contains the pericardial fluid
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10LAYERS OF THE HEART WALL
- Epicardium -visceral layer of serous pericardium
- Myocardium-the bulk of the heart that is composed
of cardiac muscle. Fibers swirl diagonally and
interlock. Striated, involuntary muscle. - Endocardium-thin layer of endothelium (s.sq.
epithelium) that is continuous with the
endothelial (s. sq. lining of large vessels
attached to the heart. Endothelium overlies a
thin layer of C.T. - Review chapter 4 for details of cardiac muscle,
connective tissues, and epithelial tissues
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13Chambers of the heart
- 2 atria
- Receive blood into heart
- 2 ventricles
- Expel blood from heart
14Accessory Features Associated With the Chambers
- Auriclessack like pouches attached to the atria
to increase their volume - Sulci-grooves that contain blood vessels that
service the heart itself and some fat - Coronary sulcus-encircles most of heart and lies
between the atria and ventricles - Anterior interventricular sulcus
- Between ventricles on anterior surface
- Posterior interventricular sulcus
- Between ventricles on posterior surface
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18Deoxygenated blood flows into the right atria,
then into the right ventricle which pumps it to
the lungs. Once in the lungs, the blood looses
its carbon dioxide and picks up oxygen. Then the
blood returns to the left atrium of the heart,
passes to the left ventricle and is expelled
into general circulation.
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20Right atrium
- Receives blood from
- Superior vena cava
- Deoxygenated blood from upper body
- Inferior vena cava
- Deoxygenated blood from lower body
- Coronary sinus
- Deoxygenated blood from the heart itself
21Features of the Right Atrium
- Pectinate muscles
- Muscular ridges on anterior wall and in auricle
- Interatrial septum
- Separates atria
- Fossa ovalis
- Depression representing remnant of foramen ovale,
an opening in the fetal heart that closes soon
after birth - Tricuspid valve
- Separates the right atrium from the right
ventricle - Composed of dense irregular c.t. covered by
endothelium
22Pectinate muscles not shown, as they are located
on anterior wall which has been removed.
23The Right Ventricle
- Receives blood from the right atrium.
- Forms most of anterior surface of heart.
- Trabeculae carneae
- Papillary muscles
- Chora tendinae
- Fibers involved with electrical conduction in the
heart - Interventricular septum divides right and left
ventricles.
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25Valves of the Right Heart
- Tricuspid valve divides the right atrium from the
right ventricle. - Its cusps are attached to corda tendenae which
are attached to cone shaped trabeculae carneae,
called papillary muscles. - This attachment prevents prolapse of the valve
into the atrium when the ventricle contracts. - Pulmonary semilunar valve opens into the
pulmonary trunk, an artery, which divides and
carries deoxygenated blood to the lungs.
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27The Left Atrium
- Forms most of the base of the heart.
- Receives oxygenated blood from the lungs through
4 pulmonary veins. - Pectinate muscles only in auricle.
- Blood passes through the bicuspid, mitral, valve
to the left ventricle.
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29Left Ventricle
- Forms the apex of the heart.
- Has trabeculae carneae and corda tendenae that
anchor bicuspid valve to the papillary muscles. - Oxygenated blood flows through the aortic
semilunar valve to the ascending aorta.
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31The Aorta
- The first branches off the ascending aorta are
the right and left coronary arteries. - Then the aorta arches and gives rise to three
large arteries - Brachiocephalic artery
- Left common carotid artery
- Left subclavian artery
- Continues inferiorly as the descending aorta.
32The Ligamentum Arteriosum
- During fetal life the lungs, of course, do not
function. - There is no need to send blood to them except to
maintain them as any other organ. - A shunt between the pulmonary trunk and aorta
called the ductus arteriosus exists as a short
cut into systemic circulation, bypassing the
lungs. - It closes shortly after birth, leaving the
ligamentum arteriorsum as a remnant.
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34Myocardial Thickness
- The atria are thin walled most flow to the
ventricles is courtesy of gravity, so not much
muscle is necessary the atrial contractions
account for only a part (about 1/3) of the flow
to the ventricles. - The ventricles are thicker, as they are the
chambers that propel blood into circulation. - The left ventricle is the thickest because it
must send blood into systemic circulation.
35- Despite the variation in thickness between the
right and left sides of the heart, the respective
chambers eject equal amounts of blood.
36The Fibrous Skeleton of the Heart
- Dense connective tissue rings forming structural
foundation around the heart valves - Keep valves from overstretching
- Fuse with IV septum
- Point of insertion for cardiac muscle
- Electrical insulation between atria and
ventricles
37Fibrous Skeleton
38Heart Valve Operation
- The valves insure one way flow of blood.
- AV valves stop the backflow of blood into the
atria (regurgitation). The papillary muscles
contract and snap them shut when ventricular
pressure pushes them toward the atria. - The semilunar valves prevent backflow from the
aorta and the pulmonary trunk. Blood is caught
in the crescent shape which causes contraction of
the valves.
39Mitral Valve Function
40Semilunar and AV Valves
41Circulation of Blood
- The right side of the heart pumps deoxygenated
blood to the lungs where it trades carbon
dioxide, a waste product of aerobic respiration,
for oxygen. - The left side of the heart pumps oxygenated blood
into systemic circulation. This includes the
heart and lungs, as they, too, are organs.
42Note that red means oxygenated and blue means
deoxygenated
43Pathway of flow
44Coronary Circulation Oxygenated
- Left coronary artery
- Anterior interventricular in anterior IV sulcus
artery serves both ventricles and left atrium - Circumflex branch in coronary sulcus-left atrium
and left ventricle - Right coronary artery
- Right coronary artery supplies the right atrium
- Posterior interventricular branch in posterior IV
sulcus-both ventricles - Marginal branch in coronary sulcus-right
ventricle - Many anastomosis
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46Coronary Circulation Deoxygenated
- Great cardiac vein-drains anterior of heart
- Both ventricles and left atrium (area supplied by
left coronary artery) - Middle cardiac vein drains posterior right and
left ventricles (area supplied by posterior IV
branch of right coronary artery) - Small cardiac vein drains right atrium and right
ventricle - Anterior cardiac veins drain right ventricle and
open directly into right atrium - Most deoxygenated blood empties into the coronary
sinus in the right atrium
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49Heart Muscle Histology
- SEE CHAPTERS 4 AND 10 FOR COMPARISON TO OTHER
MUSCLE TYPES - Branched cells
- Centrally located nucleus (1 or 2)
- Relatively abundant cytoplasm
- Relatively abundant, large mitochondria
50Heart Muscle Histology Contd
- Transverse tubules located at z discs
- Scanty sarcoplasmic reticulum-some calcium comes
from interstitial fluid - Cells junctions at intercalated discs which
contain desmosomes and gap junctions, enabling
fibers of atria to contract at one time same for
ventricles
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53Autorhythmic Cells
- The heart has inherent electrical and rhythmical
electrical activity that causes it to beat
continuously. - Autorythmic cells are self excitatory.
- They generate action potentials that trigger
heart beat. - About 1 of cardiac muscle fibers develop into
these cells during embryonic life to function as
pacemakers and conduction systems.
54Autorhythmic cells contd
- These cells insure that the chambers contract in
a coordinated movement, resulting in an effective
pump.
55Factors That Modify Autorhythmicity
- ANS
- Hormones
- These factors only modify the basic rhythm set by
the hearts own cells.
56The Conduction System
- The SA node is the pacemaker and causes atrial
contraction and an action potential in the AV
node. - The AV nodes action potential continues into the
AV bundle, right and left bundle branches and
Purkinje fibers - The Purkinje fibers cause ventricular contraction
about .2 seconds after the atria contract.
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58Rates of Action Potential Propogations
- The SA node sets a rhythm of 90-100 action
potential (beats) per minute. This node is the
natural pacemaker, whose beat is modified by
hormones and ANS. - The AV node sets the rhythm at 40-50 per minute.
It takes over if the SA node does not function. - The AV bundle, the bundle branches and the
Purkinje fibers generate actions potential at
20-40 per minute too slow to sustain life. An
artificial pacemaker is definitely called for if
the SA and AV nodes are not functioning.
59Physiology of Contraction Atrial Contraction
- The SA node depolarizes spontaneously because of
Na leakage channels. - When it reaches threshold, an action potential is
triggered, which spreads rapidly to the cells of
the atria via gap junctions located in
intercalated discs. - They, in turn, depolarize, reach their own
thresholds and contract
60Physiology of Contraction Ventricular Contraction
- The action potential of the SA node also reaches
the AV node, which directs it into the AV bundle. - The action potential continues through the bundle
branches, then through the Purkinje fibers and
finally to the cells of the ventricles. - The muscle cells of the ventricles then
depolarize, reach threshold and contract. - The rapid spread of the action potentials is
through gap junctions of intercalated discs, as
before.
61Calcium Ion
- Calcium ion must bind to troponin for contraction
to occur. - Only about 1/2 that is needed is stored and
released from the S.R. - The muscle cells action potential causes release
of Ca from the S.R. and also causes voltage
gated Ca channels to open, allowing Ca to
diffuse into cell from ECF. - Ca channels open after Na channels close and
prolong the time membrane is depolarized this is
called the plateau.
62The Plateau
- The plateau results in a long refractory period
and prevents the heart from going into spasm, as
skeletal muscles often do.
63Repolarization
- K channels open in response to the action
potential, after the Na and Ca channels close,
thus restoring electrical balance. - Na/K pumps and Ca pumps then restore the
chemical gradients.
64The Physiology of Contraction
65The Electrocardiogram
- A measure of the electical currents generated by
the action potentials spreading through the
heart. - Contraction follows the action potentials.
- Detected on surface of the skin using up to 12
electrodes.
66The Electocardiogram
- P-Atrial depolarization
- QRS-ventricular depolarization (atrial
repolarization is embedded) - T-ventricular repolarization
67The Cardiac Cycle
68Pathologies Waves
- P wave enlarged enlarged atria
- Q wave enlarged acute myocardial infarction
- R wave enlarged enlarged ventricles
- T wave flattened hypoxia
- T wave elevated hyperkalemia
69Pathologies Intervals and Segments
- P-Q interval lengthened increase in time for
action potential to travel from SA node to points
beyond. Coronary artery disease (RF can cause
scarring that can lead to this). - S-T segment elevated acute myocardial
infarction - S-T segment depressed hypoxia
- Q-T segment lengthened myocardial damage,
cardiac ischemia, conduction abnormalities
70The Cardiac Cycle Events That Occur During One
Beat
- The atria and ventricles alternately contract and
relax. - Blood is forced from areas of high pressure
caused by contraction or gravity into areas of
low pressure created by relaxation.
71Ventricular filling rapid, diastases, atrial
systole (30) EDV130 ml ESV60 ml SVEDV-ESV70
ml
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73Heart Sounds
- S1LUBAV valves closing and associated blood
turbulence - S2DUBsemilunar valves closing and associated
blood turbulence - S3usually inaudibleturbulence during rapid
ventricular filling - S4usually inaudibleturbulence in atrial
contraction
74Murmurs
- Sounds due to regurgitation through unclosed
valves - Range from inconsequential to life threatening
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76Cardiac Output
- COSV x HR
- CO70 ml/beat x 75 beats/min5.25L/min
- Cardiac reserve
- MAX CO RESTING CO
- 4-5 times resting value is average as high as
7-8 in top athletes very little or none with
severe heart disease.
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78FACTORS THAT AFFECT CO
79Factors affecting stroke volume
- ESV
- Preload
- Contractility
- Autonomic
- Hormones
- Drugs
- Positive and negative inotropic agents
- Increase or reduce calcium ion entry,
respectively - Afterload
- EDV
- Preload
- Proportional to EDV
- EDV and stroke volume
- More inmore out
- Keeps the volume equal in both ventricles
80The Frank-Starling Law
- This law states that within limits, the more the
cardiac muscle is stretched, the more it will
contract. - Stretching, of course, is due to increased blood
volume in the chambers. - This phenomena balances the two sides of the
heart in the event that an unbalance occurs and
one side pumps a little more blood than the
other. - Say the right side pumps a little extra. Then the
left side receives an increased volume from
pulmonary circulation. The next contraction of
the left side will be more forceful, and balance
is then restored.
81ANS Regulation of Heart
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85the end