Basic heart stuff
Heart pumping and phases
Autonomic properties
Blood flow
More aspects of blood flow
100
What are the basic functions of the cardiovascular system?

Transport & distribute essential substances under dynamic physiological conditions

Remove metabolic byproducts from tissues

maintenance fluid balance

Regulate body temperature

100

What does an electrocardiogram do? how does it do it?

Cardiac impulse spreads through the heart -> a portion spreads out across the surface of the body

Recording and reference electrodes placed on the body in a specific orientation can record an ECG

100

Parasympathetic aspects of the heart? 

Rest and Digest

Project from cranial and sacral nerves

vagus nerve (x) innervates the heart directly 

tonic firing in heart, slow down heart rate

Cholinergic signaling

100

Baroreceptors are located where? what do they do?

Atria, aorta, and carotid arteries

Detect stretch (increase stretch engages afferents that activate vagal efferents, decrease stretch disengages same afferent signals) 

100

Myogenic (mechanical) for blood flow regulation steps?

helps buffer against BP fluctations

Stretch detectors - increase pressure to decrease diameter

VSM drives the response

200

Systemic circulation vs pulmonary circulation?

systemic = left side of heart pumps oxygenated blood, pumps blood to body for nutrient and gas exchange with tissues

pulmonary = right side of heart pumps de-oxygenated blood, pumps blood to lungs for gas exchange with external environment

200

The waves of an ECG include? aspects of each wave?

Right atrium depolarizes

p wave = left atrium depolarizes and atrium contracts

PR interval = wave spreads through AV node and AV bundle, conduction velocity between SA and AV nodes

QRS wave = ventricular depolarization & contraction, contraction begins just after Q through T wave, masks atrial repolarization

then there is ventricular repolarization

200

Sympathetic aspects of the heart?

fight or flight

project from thoracic and lumbar nerves

ganglia located near the spine

not targeted

sympathetic nerves innervate heart, arteries, veins and adrenal glands

Tonic firing

Cholinergic signaling at ganglia, adrenergic signaling at the organ, neurohumoral signaling 

200

RAAS is?

regulation of blood volume and SVR -> CO and MAP 

juxtaglomerular cells associated with afferent renal artery are primary site for renin release

200

Endothelial shear stress helps with?

Helps maintain tone

helps enhance blood flow delivery

respond to external environments

produces dilation in most arteries 

produces constriction in brain

relays signal to VSM

300

Path of blood through circulation is?

Vena cava -> Right atria -> right ventricle -> pulomary arteries -> lungs -> pulmonary veins -> left atria -> left ventricle -> aorta -> systemic arteries -> capillaries -> systemic veins

300

What is a Sacromere?

Contractile unit of cardiomyocyte 

increase stretch to increase force of contraction

Optimal length to produce maximal force 

operating point

300

Properties of the autonomic system of the heart

Vagus (PNS) nerve innervates SA and AV nodes

adrenergic nerves are more diffuse 

the location that generates action potentials at the highest frequency sets the pace

the only way to slow the heart rate down is to reduce the frequency and conduction of AP

muscular components of cardiac function are modulated by adrenergic vs vagal nerves

300

The two equations for blood flow are? 

q = (change)P/R

R = 8Ln/(pi)r4

300

Metabolic/neurogenic (intrinsic) blood flow regulation steps?

Neurotransmitters elicit dilation

target = VSM + endothelium

matches flow to metabolism

Highly localized to active neurons

May include neurogenic spill over 

predominantly in brain and muscle

400

The conduction system of the heart includes? 

Autorhythmic cells - pacemaker (SA and AV node, generate APs spontaneously, fastest rate sets the pace), Conduction fibers (spread throughout the heart, generate APs spontaneously but at a much slower rate)

AP spread through gap junctions

400

The phases of the Frank starling mechanism?

Phase A: Diastole, LV filling

Phase B: systole, isovolumetric contraction

Phase c: systole, ejection period

Phase D: Diastole, isovolumetric relaxation

400
a1 and a2 adrenergic signaling aspects?

Adrenergic nerves release NE 

adrenals release NE (20%) 

NE acts on a1-adrenergic receptors

a1-adrenergic receptors are located in arteries and veins

a1-adrenergic receptors activate the IP3 pathway, increases intracellular Ca2+ and causes vasoconstriction

400
Autonomic/neurogenic (extrinsic) steps for blood flow regulation?

NE mediates a-constriction, Target = VSM, systemic response helps maintain blood pressure

or 

EPI elicits modest dilation but can stimulate vasoconstriction, Target = VSM, Systemic response attenuates a-mediated vasoconstriction

400

Endothelial blood flow regulation - differences in steps between ACh Bradykinin and Insulin vs Insulin Cytokines and thrombin?

A & B & I = redistribution of blood flow, responds to & produces dilators, responds to & produces constrictors, Relays signal to VSM, (note on NO)

I & C & T = Redistribution of blood flow, responds to & produces dilators, Responds to & produces constrictors, Relays signal to VSM, (note on feedback, NO vs ET1 status)

500

The impulse conducting system path is?

Autorhythmic cells generate action potential spontaneously, Conduction fibers spread impulses throughout the heart, impulse travels from cell-cell via gap junctions

depolarization/ impulse wave = SA node -> Across atria -> AV node -> AV bundle/L/R bundle branches -> purkinjie fibers -> recovery

500

How many sounds does the heart make? how? 

Predominant sound caused by vibration of valves, chordae tendineae and reverberation of flow in a closed chamber

S1 = closure of mitral and tricuspid valves at the beginning of isovolumetric contraction

S2 = Closure of aortic and pulmonic valves at the beginning of isovolumetric relaxation

S3 = inflow during diastole, oscillation of blood in ventricles

S4 = vibration of ventricular wall during atrial systole/contraction

500
B2 adrenergic signaling aspects?

Sympathetic activation of adrenals stimulates the release of EPI and NE

Split is 80-20, in favour of EPI

EPI acts on B2 adrenergic receptors 

B2 adrenergic receptors are located in arteries

B2 adrenergic receptors activate the cAMP pathway, inhibits MLCK and causes dilation

500

Neurohumoral signaling for blood flow regulation steps?

Ang II and ADH cause constriction

Target = VSM

Systemic response - helps maintain blood pressure

500

Why does going from rest -> heavy aerobic exercise affect cardiac output, renal and skeletal blood flow?

The muscles start working which means is needs more O2 and uses more CO2 so the heart pumps O2 out quicker & CO2 in quicker causing the increase in Q

fight vs flight causes NE to act on the heart which increases heart size

Skeletal needs more O2 delivery, constrict all arteries that supply kidneys but dilate muscle arteries, a lot of ACh being released at neuromuscular junctions

Renal = decreases - so less blood goes to the kidneys since blood does not need to be filtered during exercise, constriction of blood vessels