Overview of Heart
Heart Anatomy and Blood Flow Pathway
Cardiac Muscle Tissue Anatomy & Electrophysiology
Cardiac Muscle Tissue Anatomy & Electrophysiology
Random A&P Tidbits
100
The heart leans/sits more heavily in which direction?
Left
100

Why is myocardium important?

Creates structural support for heart, allows for contractions, and insulates electrical activity

100

What happens in the atria during the QRS complex?

Atrial repolarization
100

What signals cardiac muscle cells to contract? Do these nerve signals come from the CNS or PNS?

Action potentials; no! they originate in specialized pacemaker cells

100
Where do turtles go in the winter?

They bury themselves at the bottom of lake and ponds and slowly leach minerals from their shells into their blood to counteract the accumulation of acidic CO2 until its warm enough to emerge

200

What are the two circuits of the heart?

Pulmonary and systemic

200

What does the pericardium do?

Structure that surrounds heart to anchor it, reduce friction as it pumps, and protect it from changing shape or overfilling

200

What unique structures are found in cardiomyocytes? What feature allows signals to be sent so quickly?

Intercalated discs; leaky gap junctions
200

What is atypical about purkinje fibers?

They are the slowest conducting cells of the heart that rely on ion channels for carrying action potentials

200
What do large carnivorous birds eat to help with digestion?

Rocks! During mechanical digestion the rocks hit hard materials (Bones?) and break them down

300

What differentiates pulmonary and systemic circulation besides their areas of blood flow?

Pressure; pulmonary circuit is low-pressure while systemic circuit is high-pressure

300

What causes coronary artery disease? Why is it problematic?

Fat build up in arteries (plaques); these blockages decrease blood flow to myocardium and a lack of oxygen kills those cells
300
What does the R-R interval tell us?

The time that an action potential spreads throughout the heart (tells us our heart rate)

300

What does sinus rhythm mean?

The pacemaker cell (SA node) sets and maintains the heart's normal contractile rhythm

300

Why do none of the alligator handlers ever get their hands bit off?

Because they handle the gators after the creature just had a huge meal, so their blood is super basic, meaning they feel much like moving, so they are pretty much harmless
400
What are the two factors that influence blood pressure and blood flow?

Rate and force of heart contractions

400

Why is there no need for valves between the atria and the venous blood that flows into them?

Atria are under very low pressure, meaning majority of blood flows into atria via gravity and the pressure in veins

400

What extrinsic factors can influence the rate of SA node signaling?

Sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous sysetms

400
Extra pacemaker cells that take over and create irregular heart rhythms are called...

Ectopic pacemakers

400

Why do a cat's lungs predispose it to dying if it gets hit by a car?

Cats don't have separate lung cavities, so if one lung collapses, both lungs will give out, and it will be sad for the cat

500

Compare pulmonary gas exchange and systemic gas exchange.

Pulmonary capillaries facilitate exchange of carbon dioxide and oxygen at alveoli; systemic capillaries do the reverse at tissues

500

1) What feature encases both the left and right atriums? 2) What is its job? 3) Does it differ at all between right and left atrium?

Auricle; it expands to provide the atria with more space to hold blood; yes, the auricle of the right atrium is much larger

500

What might happen if cardiac muscles cells did not contract in a coordinated manner?

There would not be a forceful enough contraction to pump blood all over the body, there would be a lack in oxygen circulating to key tissues
500

How does the electrical signal change in speed as it travels through the heart?

It is at its fastest right after SA node generation and decreases considerably in impulse speed as it travels through the AV node

500

Why have none of the biggest loser contestants ever been able to keep off the weight they lost?

Each person's body has a fat mass set point that it will religiously defend. People can temporarily lose weight, but their body will subconsciously up and down regulate metabolic processes to keep that fat mass set point. Only bariatric surgery has been shown through research to permanently reset this point.

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