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Thursday April 2nd, 2015 Agenda

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1 Thursday April 2nd, 2015 Agenda
“People are capable, at any time in their lives, of doing what they dream of.” – Paulo Coelho Agenda Physiology of the heart Announcements Turn in blood worksheet 1and 2 if you haven't If you haven’t taken the Digestive exam this your last week Cardiovascular exam next Friday

2 Cardiovascular System
Part 3: Physiology Of The Heart

3 The Cardiovascular System
A closed system of the heart and blood vessels The heart pumps blood Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all parts of the body The function of the cardiovascular system is to deliver oxygen and nutrients and to remove carbon dioxide and other waste products

4 The Heart: Conduction System*
Myocardium of the heart contains cardiac muscle cells Generate action potentials over and over again in a rhythmic pattern Intercalated discs allow action potentials to travel from cell rapidly so they function as one cell rather than individual cells Cardiac cells function as the pacemaker of the heart and set the conduction system Pacemaker of the heart: sets the rhythm for the entire heart Conduction system: electrical conduction system that controls the heart rate

5 Cardiac Muscle Tissue intercalated disc intercalated disc

6 The Heart: Conduction System *
Cardiac conduction system: The electrical conduction system controls the heart rate This system creates the electrical impulses and sends them throughout the heart. These impulses make the heart contract and pump blood. Conduction System Pathway Sinoatrial Node (SA Node) Atrioventricular Node (AV Node) Atrioventricular Bundle (Bundle of His) Right and Left Bundle Branches Purkinje Fibers

7 The Heart: components of the conduction system
Sinoatrial Node (SA Node) Located in the right atrial wall Establishes the basic rhythm of the heart Also known as the natural pacemaker Action potential spontaneously arises in the SA node Action potential moves through the atria causing both atrium to contract

8 The Heart: components of the conduction system
Atrioventicular Node (AV Node) Located in the bottom of the right atrium Cells in the AV Node conduct impulses slowly, so there is a delay as the impulses travels through the node Allows time for the atria to finish contraction before the ventricles begin contracting

9 The Heart: components of the conduction system
Atrioventicular Bundle (Bundle of His) Located in the interventricular septum The action potential is conducted from the atria into the ventricles

10 The Heart: components of the conduction system
Right and Left Bundle Branches After leaving the Bundle of His the action potential enters the left and right bundle branches Left and right bundle branches travel through the interventricular septum toward the apex of the heart

11 The Heart: components of the conduction system
Purkinje Fibers Rapidly conduct the action potential First to the apex of the ventricles(bottom of the heart) Then upward to the top of the ventricles A fraction of a second after the atria contract the ventricles do

12 Check For understanding 4
List the components of the conduction system in the correct order Act as the pacemaker of the heart, are found in the myocardium and generate action potentials Electrical system which controls heart rate Known as the natural pacemaker Sets the rhythm for the entire heart Contains cells which slowly conduct an impulse

13 List the components of the conduction system in the correct order
Act as the pacemaker of the heart, are found in the myocardium and generate action potentials Electrical system which controls heart rate Known as the natural pacemaker Sets the rhythm for the entire heart Contains cells which slowly conduct an impulse SA Node, AV Node, Atrioventricular Bundle (Bundle of His), Right and Left Bundle Branches, Purkinje Fibers Cardiac muscle cells Conduction System SA node Pacemaker AV node

14 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle
Single Cardiac Cycle: all events associated with one heartbeat 2 atria contract while the 2 ventricles relax then the 2 ventricles contract while the 2 atria relax Systole: contraction Diastole: relaxation Lub-Dub: the monosyllabus describing heart sounds When the cardiac cycle begins all four chambers are relaxed and the ventricles are partially filled with blood

15 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle Stages*
Atrial Systole Atria contract Atrioventricular (AV) valves open Blood fills the relaxed ventricles Semilunar valves close

16 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle Stages
Early Ventricular Systole Atria relax Ventricles contract causing the AV valves to force close The Lub sound Semilunar valves remain closed

17 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle Stages
Late Ventricular Systole Atria relax Ventricles contract AV valves remain closed Semilunar valves are forced open

18 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle Stages
Early Ventricular Diastole Atria and ventricles relax AV valves and Semilunar valves closed Atria begin passively filling with blood

19 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle Stages
Late Ventricular Diastole Atria and ventricles relax Atria passively fill with blood AV valves open Semilunar valves closed The Dub sound

20

21 Check For understanding 5
All events associated with one heartbeat The 5 stages of the cardiac cycle Also known as contraction Also known as relaxation Atria relax, ventricles contract, AV valves remain closed, semilunar valves are forced open Atria and ventricles relax, AV valves and Semilunar valves closed, atria begin passively filling with blood

22 All events associated with one heartbeat
The 5 stages of the cardiac cycle Also known as contraction Also known as relaxation Atria relax, ventricles contract, AV valves remain closed, semilunar valves are forced open Atria and ventricles relax, AV valves and Semilunar valves closed, atria begin passively filling with blood Cardiac cycle Atrial systole, early ventricular systole, late ventricular systole, early ventricular diastole, late ventricular diastole Systole Diastole Late ventricular systole Early ventricular diastole

23 Tuesday April 7th, 2015 Agenda
“At first glace it may appear too hard. Look again. Always look again” Fun Fact: If you shout for 8 years, 7 months and 6 days you would produce enough energy to warm a cup of coffee Announcements Turn in worksheet 1 on the blood by Friday Turn in worksheet 2 the anatomy of the heart by Friday Exam this Friday on the cardiovascular system Review is posted on Edmodo Agenda Finish Physiology of the heart Work on the review and notecard

24 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
Known as an ECG Records and displays the electrical events in the heart Each event has a distinctive waveform

25 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
P Wave Represents depolarization (contraction) of the atria Depolarization spreads from SA node towards AV node Depolarization also spreads from the right atrium to the left atrium

26 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
PR Interval Measured from the beginning of the P wave to the beginning of the QRS complex Interval reflects the time the impulse takes to travel from the SA node to the AV node

27 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
QRS Complex Rapid depolarization (contraction/systole) of the right and left ventricles Ventricles are larger and stronger than the atria so QRS complex has a larger amplitude than the P wave

28 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
T Wave Repolarization (relaxation) of the ventricles QT Interval Time ventricles depolarize and remain depolarized

29 The Heart: Electrocardiogram
Irregular ECG’s Tachycardia: fast heart rate Heart rate of over 100 bpm at rest Bradycardia: slow heart rate Heart rate under 60 bpm at rest Arrhythmia: irregular heartbeat Fibrillation: condition where the heart is uncoordinated and useless as a pump Angina Pectoris: chest pain, resulting from ischemia of the myocardium

30 Check For understanding 6
Records and displays the electrical events in the heart Rapid depolarization(contraction) of the ventricles Slow heart rate Depolarization of the atria Repolarization(relaxation) of the ventricles Fast heart rate Irregular heart rate

31 Records and displays the electrical events in the heart
Rapid depolarization(contraction) of the ventricles Slow heart rate Depolarization of the atria Repolarization(relaxation) of the ventricles Fast heart rate Irregular heart rate ECG QRS complex Bradycardia P wave T wave Tachycardia Arrhythmia

32 The Heart: Cardiac Output
Cardiac output (CO) Amount of blood pumped by each side of the heart in one minute CO = (heart rate [HR]) x (stroke volume [SV]) Stroke volume Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in one contraction

33 The Heart: Regulation of Heart Rate
Stroke volume usually remains relatively constant Starling’s law of the heart – the more that the cardiac muscle is stretched, the stronger the contraction Changing heart rate is the most common way to change cardiac output

34 The Heart: Regulation of Heart Rate
Increased heart rate Sympathetic nervous system (fight or flight) Exercise Crisis Hormones Epinephrine (aka adrenaline) Thyroxine: produced by the thyroid gland Decreased blood volume Makes your heart work harder to pump blood

35 The Heart: Regulation of Heart Rate
Decreased heart rate Parasympathetic nervous system More oxygen in blood during rest so heart doesn’t have to work hard to pump blood High blood pressure or blood volume More blood flowing through the body so the heart doesn’t have to work hard to pump

36 Friday April 10th , 2015 You have till 12:42 to study
After the exam turn in Worksheet 1 on the blood and Worksheet 2 on the anatomy of the heart if you haven’t turned them in yet After the exam turn in your notecard for extra credit Remember bring 2 liter bottles for extra credit till next Friday, each bottle is worth 5 pts


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