1 / 45

Advanced Biology

Advanced Biology. Heart. Size, Shape, Location. Fist Hollow, cone shaped Mediastinum, Rests on diaphragm, posterior to sternum, Lungs on each side. Size, Shape, Location. 2/3 lie to left of midsternal line Points toward right shoulder and left hip (apex, PMI).

Télécharger la présentation

Advanced Biology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Advanced Biology Heart

  2. Size, Shape, Location • Fist • Hollow, cone shaped • Mediastinum, Rests on diaphragm, posterior to sternum, Lungs on each side

  3. Size, Shape, Location • 2/3 lie to left of midsternal line • Points toward right shoulder and left hip (apex, PMI)

  4. Structure/Function 4 Chambers • 2 Superior Atria • 2 Inferior Ventricles • Divided by interatrial/interventricular septum

  5. Structure/Function 4 Chambers • Most Mass in Right and Left Ventricles; pumping chambers • Right= Forms most of the anterior surface • Left= Forms inferoposterior aspect. Much more muscular!

  6. Structure/Function 4 Chambers • Posterior Atrial walls are smooth • Anterior Atrial walls are rigid with bundles of muscle tissue • Atria are the Receiving chambers; thin walled

  7. Pathway of Blood • Blood Flow through chambers • Right Atrium – Superior Vena Cava, Inferior Vena Cava, Coronary Sinus • Left Atrium – 4 Pulmonary veins pump blood back

  8. Pathway of Blood • Right Ventricle – pumps blood to pulmonary trunk (goes to lungs) • Left Ventricle – pumps blood to Aorta, then out to body

  9. Pathway of Blood • Valves – Atrioventricular (AV) • Right – Tricuspid • Left – Bicuspid • Semilunar valves in pulmonary trunk/aorta

  10. Pathway of Blood • Pulmonary Circuit – Pulmonary veins have blood with oxygen • Pulmonary arteries have blood without oxygen

  11. Pathway of Blood • Systemic Circuit – Arteries have blood with oxygen • Veins have blood without oxygen • See page 662

  12. Major Branches • Coronary Circulation – supply blood to the heart • Left Coronary – runs to left side and divides into two parts

  13. Major Branches • Anterior Interventricular artery • Supplies blood to interventricular septum and anterior walls of ventricles

  14. Major Branches • Circumflex artery • Supplies blood to the left atrium and posterior wall of left ventricle

  15. Major Branches • Right Coronary – Runs to the right and also divides into two parts

  16. Major Branches • Marginal Artery – lateral part of right side of heart (atrium) • Posterior interventricular artery – Runs to the apex, supplies posterior ventricle walls

  17. Major Branches • Cardiac Veins – 1 major, 3 minor that dump into • Coronary Sinus – empties blood into the right atrium. • Located on Posterior side

  18. Major Branches • Great Cardiac Vein – Found in the anterior interventricular sulcus (groove) • Middle Cardiac Vein – In posterior interventricular sulcus

  19. Major Branches • Small Cardiac Vein – runs along heart’s right inferior margin • Several other anterior cardiac veins empty directly into Right Atrium

  20. Problems? • Myocardial Infarction (MI) – Heart Attack. • Blockage to coronary arteries reduces blood flow • Damage to the Left Ventricle is the most serious

  21. Conduction System • Intrinsic Cardiac Conduction System – Non-contractile cells that initiate and distribute impulses

  22. Conduction System • Sinoatrial Node (SA) – In right atria • Heart’s Natural Pacemaker • Atrioventricular Node (AV) – In interatrial septum above tricuspid valve

  23. Conduction System • Atrioventricular Bundle (bundle of His) – electrical connection between atria and ventricle • Bundle Branches – Run down interventricular septum to apex

  24. Conduction System • Purkinje Fibers – penetrate apex, run superiorly up ventricle walls • Like milking a cow

  25. ECG • Electrocardiograph • Waves include • P – SA node sends first impulse

  26. ECG • QRS – Ventricular depolarization • Precedes ventricular contraction • T – Ventricular Repolarization

  27. ECG • Intervals • P-R (P-Q) – Beginning of atrial excitation and ventricular contraction • Q-T – Action potential through Heart

  28. Cardiac Cycle • Systole – Contraction of ventricles or atria • Diastole – Relaxation of ventricles or atria

  29. Cardiac Cycle • Systolic Pressure – Ventricular contraction 120mmHg • Diastolic Pressure – Ventricular refilling 80mmHg • Hypertension – High BP • Hypotension – Low BP

  30. Heart Sounds • Lub-dup • Lub – AV valves close (systole) • Dup – SL valves close (diastole)

  31. Heart Sounds • Murmurs – obstructions in BV • Thin walled vibrations

  32. Cardiac Output • CO = amount of blood pumped by each ventricle in 1 minute • CO = HR x SV (stroke volume) • SV = Volume of blood pumped out by ventricle (Force of contraction)

  33. Cardiac Output • CO = 75 bpm x 70mLpb • CO = 5250 mL/min

  34. Developmental Aspects • Heart pumps by 23rd day • 1-2 days later, chambers start to form • Chambers are:

  35. Developmental Aspects • Sinus venosus – receives all venous blood, becomes Rt. Atrium & Coronary Sinus, SA node • Atrium – becomes muscle ridged parts of atrium

  36. Developmental Aspects • Ventricle – Becomes left ventricle • Bulbus cordis – Gives rise to the pulmonary trunk, first part of the aorta, most of the right ventricle

  37. Age Related Changes • Sclerosis – Thickening of valve flaps • Decline in Cardiac Reserve – Heart is less able to adjust to changes

  38. Age Related Changes • Fibrosis of cardiac muscle – Scarred nodes, increase in arrhythmias • Atherosclerosis – acclerated by inactivity, smoking, stress. CV disease

More Related