EKG
EKG P2
Blood Pressure P1
Blood Pressure P2
Blood Pressure P3
100

Can record electrical currents, this acronym is used to avoid confusion with an EEG, which measures neuron activity on the scalp. Electrodes for this are placed on limbs & chest, and each records slightly different activity

EKG (electrocardiogram)

100
Indicates enlarged atrium

Larger P wave

100

(0.1 sec), depolarization of SA node causes atria depolarization, atrial systole forces blood that has collected in atria through open AV valves into ventricles

Atrial systole

100

Athletes have stronger systole & can pump more blood with each contraction; all of this is known as ______

Increased stroke volume

100

Measure of pressure in arteries generated by left ventricle during systole & the remaining pressure in the vessel during diastole

Blood pressure

200

If conduction pathway is normal, if heart is enlarged, if heart regions are damaged, and cause of chest pain

What the EKG can show/determine

200

Indicates myocardial infarction

Larger Q wave

200

(0.3 sec), begins with contraction of ventricle walls, pressure rises so blood is forced against AV valves, causing them to shut

Ventricular systole

200

Organized into routes that carry blood to specific organs. A part of the cardiac output flows separately to each part of the body, and deoxygenated blood is returned to the heart in a separate set of veins

Blood vessels

200

Commonly called a blood pressure cuff, this measures blood pressure. The top number in the reading indicates the systolic pressure and the bottom indicates the diastolic pressure

Sphygmomanometer

300

Represents atrial depolarization as impulse spreads from sinoatrial node and through both atria

P wave

300

Indicates enlarged ventricles

Larger R wave

300

Pressure rises enough to force blood through both semi-lunar valves; total blood ejected is 70 mL

Ventricular ejection

300

Blood comes out of the heart from the left ventricle under great pressure, which can be felt as a _____ in several places throughout the body

Pulse

300

Walls aren't as muscular. They're made of thinner layers of tissue and are distensible so they can adapt to changes in blood pressure and volume

Venules and veins

400

Rapid ventricular depolarization, atrial repolarization is also occurring, but its electrical activity is masked by this

QRS complex

400

Indicates heart muscle isn't getting enough O2 (from blockage of coronary artery)

Flat T wave

400

Relaxation period (0.4 sec), both atria & ventricles relax. As pressure drops, blood from aorta & pulmonary trunk flows backwards but is stopped by cusps of closed semi-lunar valves. Pressure drops enough, AV valves open, blood collected during atrial diastole rushes into ventricles from atria. At the end, P wave appears, atria contract, cycle starts again

Diastole

400

Very elastic and expands as blood pressure increases when blood leaves the left ventricle

Arteries and arterioles

400

Leaky valves in veins cause them to become dilated and twisted, caused by congenital defects in valves, prolonged standing, pregnancy, aging, and obesity.

Varicose veins

500

Ventricular repolarization, just as ventricles start to relax (diastole)

T wave

500
Indicates high blood K+

Larger T wave

500

During exercise, as the heart beats faster, the relaxation period shortens, but the _____ doesn't change much

Systole timing

500

Muscular walls of arterioles allow them to play a role in _____. By contracting this muscular layer, less blood will flow through that vessel & increases the pressure of blood elsewhere in the body

Maintaining blood pressure

500

Compression/support socks or stockings, sclerotherapy (inserting highly concentrated saline solution into impacted vein), surgery (removal of or tying off of vein), and laser/light therapy

Treatments of varicose veins

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