Randos 😩
Blood 🩸
Vasculature 🩹
The heart ❀️
Histology 🫣
100

What are the equations for cardiac output and mean arterial pressure

CO = HR x SV

MAP = CO x SVR

100

What are the 4 valves of the heart (in order of blood flow) and where would you find each

Tricuspid (right atrium -> right ventricle)

Pulmonary (right ventricle -> pulmonary artery)

Bicuspid (left atrium -> left ventricle)

Aortic (left ventricle -> aorta)

100

Describe elastic vs. muscular arteries and give examples of where you'd find each

elastic:

- Large arteries closest to the heart that stretch and recoil

- Eg. aorta, subclavian artery


muscular:

- Deliver blood to body regions and have contracile characteristics

- Eg. Coronary arteries, radial arteries

100

What is the electrical conducting system in the heart, in order

SA node (pacemaker) -> AV node -> Atrioventricular bundle -> Bundle Branches -> Purkinje fibres

100

The nucleus of a cardiac muscle fibre is in the ___ part of the cell

centre

200

What is the Frank-Starling Law

The more the heart muscle is stretched during filling (increased venous return/end-diastolic volume), the stronger it contracts, resulting in a greater stroke volume

↑ preload β†’ ↑ stretch β†’ ↑ contraction force

200

___% total blood volume -> arterial system

___% total blood volume -> venous system

30-35% total blood volume -> arterial system

65-70% total blood volume -> venous system

200

What are the 3 types of capillaries and where would you find each

Continuous (eg. skeletal)

Fenestrated (with pores) (eg. kidney)

Discontinuous (eg. liver)

200

During the plateau phase of a cardiac action potential, __________ enters the cell through slow channels while __________ leaves the cell, resulting in a prolonged depolarization

calcium; potassium

200

Arteries have thicker/thinner walls, wider/narrower lumens, and have/don't have valves

Veins have thicker/thinner walls, wider/narrower lumens, and have/don't have valves

Arteries have thicker walls, narrower lumens, and don't have valves

Veins have thinner walls, wider lumens, and have valves

300

___-sided heart failure β†’ Pulmonary edema

___-sided heart failure β†’ Peripheral/systemic edema

left; right

300

Define each of the following

- Preload

- Contractility

- Afterload

- Preload = Amount of blood filling the ventricle (venous return)

- Contractility = Force of ventricular contraction 

- Afterload = Systemic Vascular Resistance (AKA Blood Pressure)

300

What type of blood vessel controls organ blood flow the most and why

Arterioles

  • Primary site of resistance

  • Maintain systemic vascular resistance (SVR)

  • Maintain MAP (β€œpressure head”)

300

The interventricular septum has two parts, called the ___ part and ___ part. The ___ part is the most common site of defects because it is ___

muscular; membranous; membranous; thinner

300

Match each component with the correct tunic layer:

- Vasa vasorum

- Collagen and elastin matrix

- Endothelium

- Smooth muscle

- Innervations (nerves)

Tunica externa:

- Vasa vasorum

- Innervations (nerves)

Tunica media:

- Collagen and elastin matrix

- Smooth muscle

Tunica intima:

- Endothelium

400

What do each represent on an ECG

  • P wave
  • QRS complex
  • T wave

What are the valves doing during isovolumetric contraction and relaxation?

P wave -> atrial depolarization

QRS complex -> ventricular depolarization

T wave -> ventricular repolarization


The valves are all closed

400

What are the following values between arterial vs. venous blood:

- PO2 mmHg

- PCO2 mmHG

- O2 sat

- pH

arterial:

- PO2 mmHg -> 90-100

- PCO2 mmHG -> 40

- O2 sat -> 97-100

- pH -> 7.4


venous:

- PO2 mmHg -> 40

- PCO2 mmHG -> 46

- O2 sat -> 75

- pH -> 7.37

400

Describe the pathway of coronary artery and vein circulation

The circle-loop diagram anastomizes what pairs of arteries?

Right coronary artery:

  • R. marginal artery

  • Posterior Descending Artery (PDA)


Left coronary artery:

  • L. Circumflex Artery (LCX)

  • L. Anterior Descending Artery (LAD)


Right Coronary Artery (RCA) -> Circumflex Artery

Left Anterior Descending (LAD) -> Posterior Descending Artery (PDA)

400

List two differences between the action potential of a cardiac contractile cell and a skeletal muscle cell

Cardiac action potential has a plateau and a much longer refractory period

400

Describe the layers from inside the heart to the outside (hint: what is the cavity and where is it located)

endocardium -> myocardium -> visceral serous pericardium (epi) -> pericardial cavity -> parietal serous pericardium -> fibrous pericardium

500

Indicate whether each component impact heart rate OR stroke volume, and whether it would increase or decrease:

- Preload

- Contractility

- Parasympathetic Nervous System

- Venous return

- Afterload

- Catecholamines

- Preload -> increases SV

- Contractility -> increases SV

- Parasympathetic Nervous System -> decreases HR

- Venous return -> increases HR

- Afterload -> decreases SV

- Catecholamines -> increases HR

500

Define filtration vs. absorption, and describe the forces that contribute to both (hint: 2 each)

Filtration = Moves fluid out of capillary

  • Capillary hydrostatic pressure (PUSH) – MAIN FORCE
    • Due to the force of blood pushing against walls
  • Interstitial fluid colloid osmotic pressure (PULL)
    • Due to concentration of solutes in tissue


Absorption = Moves fluid out of tissues

  • Blood colloid osmotic pressure (PULL) – MAIN FORCE
    • Due to blood plasma proteins pulling fluid in

  • Interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure (PUSH)
    • Due to force of fluid in tissues pushing back against blood vessels

500

The anterior intercostal arteries arise from the __________ thoracic artery and supply the anterior portions of the intercostal spaces.

The azygos vein ascends on the __________ side of the vertebral column and drains into the __________ vena cava.

internal; right; superior

500

Which of the following structures lie in the coronary sulcus:

A. Left anterior descending interventricular artery, marginal artery 

B. Great cardiac vein, circumflex artery 

C. Middle cardiac vein, right coronary artery 

D. Anterior cardiac vein, middle cardiac vein

E. Small cardiac vein, posterior descending interventricular artery

B. Great cardiac vein, circumflex artery

500

In cardiac muscle, intercalated discs have gap junctions in the ___ portion and fascia adherens in the ___. These discs are used for __, where ___ serve to conduct electrical synapses between cells. ___ also offer mechanical strength. There is ___ regenerative capacity for cardiac muscle

lateral; transverse; synchronized contractions; Gap junctions; desmosomes; little