Cardiovascular System
Cardiovascular System
Electrical Events of the Heart
Blood Vessels
Lymphatic System
100

list the four chambers of the heart; specify whether the chamber is part of the systemic or pulmonary circuit

right atrium and left ventricle (systemic) and left atrium and right ventricle (pulmonary)

100

describe the three layers of the heart wall

epicardium: visceral layer of the serous pericardium 

myocardium: contractile cardiac muscle cells 

endocardium: innermost layer, continuous with endothelial lining of blood vessels

100

how does the autonomic nervous system affect heart rate?

sympathetic speeds up 

parasympathetic slows down 

100

list (3) differences between veins and arteries, including direction of blood flow 

veins have valves while arteries do not 

arteries have a thicker tunica media 

arteries take blood away from the heart whereas veins take blood toward the heart

100

list the three parts of the lymphatic system

lymphatic vessels, lymph, lymphoid tissues and organs

200

describe the pericardium

superficial fibrous pericardium: functions to protect and anchor the heart to surrounding structures and prevent overfilling

deep two-layered serous pericardium: two layers separated by fluid-filled pericardial cavity

- parietal layer lines internal surface of fibrous pericardium

- visceral layer (epicardium) on external surface of heart

200

name the (2) structures responsible for anchoring the atrioventricular valves

papillary muscles and chordae tendineae

200

list the three parts of the action potential

1. pacemaker potential

2. depolarization 

3. repolarization 

slides 55-59

200

describe the three types of capillaries and where they may be found

continuous (skin, muscle), fenestrated (kidneys, SI), sinusoidal (liver, spleen, bone marrow)

200

describe how the structure of the lymphatic vessels is suited to their functions, including valve structure

slide 5

300

describe cardiac output and (2) factors that may affect it

Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in 1 minute

CO = heart rate (HR) × stroke volume (SV)

–HR = number of beats per minute

–SV = volume of blood pumped out by one ventricle with each beat

Factors affecting CO: 

1. regulation of stroke volume 

2. regulation of heart rate 

slides 99-113

300

describe the (3) major mechanical phases of the heart and during what stage of systole or diastole the phases take place

1. ventricular filling (mid-to-late diastole)

2. ventricular emptying (systole)

2a. isovolumetric contraction phase

2b. ejection phase 

3. isovolumetric relaxation (early diastole) 

slides 91-93

300

describe how depolarization and repolarization relate to: emptying and filling of the heart chambers, contraction and relaxation of the heart, systole and diastole

depolarization: contraction, emptying, systole

repolarization: relaxation, filling, diastole

300

describe the function of precapillary sphincters 

slide 7

300

describe (3) ways that lymph to moves toward the heart

movement of skeletal muscles 

pulmonary pressure which creates suction and prevents backflow 

contraction of smooth muscle in the lymphatic vessels 

400

describe circulation through the heart, beginning from the venae cavae emptying into the receiving chamber, including the valves

right atrium > tricuspid valve > right ventricle > pulmonary semilunar valve > pulmonary trunk > lungs > left atrium > bicuspid valve > left ventricle > aortic semilunar valve > aorta 

slide 33

400

describe (2) differences and (2) similarities between cardiac muscle cells and skeletal muscle cells and (2) general facts about the cardiac muscle fibers

Cardiac muscle cells: striated, short, (bifurcated) branched, fat, interconnected

–One central nucleus (at most, 2 nuclei)

–Contain numerous large mitochondria (25–35% of cell volume)

–Sarcomeres

--Z discs, A bands, and I bands all present

–T tubules are wider, but less numerous

--Enter cell only once at Z disc

–SR simpler than in skeletal muscle; no triads

Intercalated discs are connecting junctions between cardiac cells that contain:

–Desmosomes: hold cells together; prevent cells from separating during contraction

–Gap junctions: allow ions to pass from cell to cell; electrically couple adjacent cells

--Allows heart to be a functional syncytium, a single coordinated unit

Similarities with skeletal muscle:

–Muscle contraction is preceded by depolarizing action potential

–Depolarization wave travels down T tubules; causes sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) to release Ca2+

‒Excitation-contraction coupling occurs

--Ca2+ binds troponin causing filaments to slide

Differences between cardiac and skeletal muscle:

–Some cardiac muscle cells are self-excitable (built-in nervous system)

slides 43-52

400

list the (5) steps in the sequence of excitation in the cardiac intrinsic conduction system

1. SA node

2. AV node

3. AV bundle 

4. right and left bundle branches

5. Purkinje fibers 

slides 60-67

400

describe how blood pressure may be increased or decreased in response to homeostatic imbalance 

slide 18-19

400

describe T and B lymphocytes 

•T-cells (T-lymphocytes)

--Manage the immune response, some attacking the disease directly

•B-cells (B-lymphocytes)

--Produce Plasma Cells (can divide and become plasma cells), secreting antibodies to immobilize antigens which can then be phagocytized

500

describe coronary circulation, including (1) general fact, (2) facts about the coronary arteries, and (2) facts about the coronary veins

general facts: 

–Functional blood supply to heart muscle itself

–Shortest circulation in body

–Delivered when heart is relaxed

–Left ventricle receives most of coronary blood supply

coronary arteries: 

–Both left and right coronary arteries arise from base of aorta and supply arterial blood to heart

–Both encircle heart in coronary sulcus

–Branching of coronary arteries varies among individuals

–Arteries contain many anastomoses (junctions)

--Provide additional routes for blood delivery

--Cannot compensate for coronary artery occlusion

–Heart receives 1/20th of body’s blood supply

–Left coronary artery supplies interventricular septum, anterior ventricular walls, left atrium, and posterior wall of left ventricle; has two branches:

--Anterior interventricular artery

--Circumflex artery

–Right coronary artery supplies right atrium and most of right ventricle; has two branches:

--Right marginal artery

--Posterior interventricular artery

coronary veins:

–Cardiac veins collect blood from capillary beds

–Coronary sinus empties into right atrium; formed by merging cardiac veins

--Great cardiac vein of anterior interventricular sulcus

--Middle cardiac vein in posterior interventricular sulcus

--Small cardiac vein from inferior margin

–Several anterior cardiac veins empty directly into right atrium anteriorly

slides 36-41

500

describe congestive heart failure in terms of the type of condition it is its (4) potential causes

Congestive heart failure (CHF):

–Progressive condition; CO is so low that blood circulation is inadequate to meet tissue needs

–Reflects weakened myocardium caused by:

--coronary atherosclerosis

--persistent high blood pressure

--multiple myocardial infarcts

--dilated cardiomyopathy 

slides 117-119


500

describe the main features of the Electrocardiogram

–P wave: depolarization of SA node and atria

–QRS complex: ventricular depolarization and atrial repolarization

–T wave: ventricular repolarization

–P-R interval: beginning of atrial excitation to beginning of ventricular excitation

–S-T segment: entire ventricular myocardium depolarized

–Q-T interval: beginning of ventricular depolarization through ventricular repolarization

slides 76-83

500

describe hydrostatic pressure, osmotic pressure, how they relate to blood pressure, and under what conditions fluid will move both in and out

slide 27

500

describe circulation through the lymph nodes and how the structure of the lymph nodes aid in circulation

slides 20-22

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