A&P 2 the heart
inferior vena cava
Returns blood from body areas below the diaphragm.
mediastinum
medial cavity of the thorax beneath sternum
auricles
protruding appendages of atria
tricuspid valve
the right AV valve, three flexible cusps
foramen ovale
within 48 hours of birth, the opening seals off and becomes the fossa ovalis
coronary sulcus
...The atria of the heart are separated from the ventricles by the coronary sulcus
posterior interventricular sulcus
...one of the two grooves that separates the ventricles of the heart
anterior interventricular sulcus
...one of two grooves that separates the ventricles of the heart, the other being the posterior interventricular sulcus. The anterior interventricular sulcus is situated on the sternocostal surface of the heart, close to its left margin.
Circuit systems
2 circuit systems: Pulmonary, pumps to and from lungs to receive oxygen and dispel carbon dioxide. Systemic pumps oxygenated blood through the body to supply tissue with nutrients and oxygen. The left side of heart receives the oxygenated blood from the lungs. The right side receives oxygen-poor blood and pumps it to the lungs.
Heart
4 chambers: Right and left atria receive, right and left ventricles pump out.
Heart Skeleton
Band of dense connective tissue meshwork of collagen and elastic fibers that separate the atria from the ventricles (they are not made of bone) and extend up into the septa
pericardial cavity
Between visceral and pericardial layers, contains serous fluid, provides lubrication between layers to allow heart to move friction free.
pectinate muscles
Bundles of muscles that form ridges in anterior portion of right atrium.
Vein
Carries blood from capillaries to the heart
coronary sinus
Collects blood draining from the myocardium.
Cardiovascular system
Consists of the heart, blood vessels, and blood
serous pericardium
Deep to the fibrous pericardium, its parietal layer lines the surface of the fibrous pericardium and at the superior point of the heart turns inwardly around the valves and forms a visceral layer, called the epicardium, which is an integral part of the heart wall.
Heart definition 2
Muscular pump that is about the size of a fist; The heart weights 1/200th (0.5%) of total body weight, yet receives 1/20th of all of the blood
superior vena cava
Returns blood from body regions superior to the diaphragm
electrocardiograph
a device used to detect the electric currents across the heart and generate an EKG
Pericardium
a double-walled sac that encloses the heart
Cardiac Duty Cycle
describes the mechanical operation of the heart as it pumps blood (i.e., beats) a. the resting heart beats about 70-75 x/min b. each beat is a complete cardiac duty cycle lasting about 0.8 seconds (0.5 - diastole, 0.3 - systole)
pericardial cavity
fluid-filled cavity between the two membranes; the pericardial fluid is exuded by the serous pericardium
anchoring desmosomes
hold cells together in heart
endocardium
inner lining of the heart
myogenic
means the heartbeat originates in the heart,
EKG
measures the electrical activity associated with the spread of the cardiac impulse across the heart
right ventricle
not as strong a pump as the LV, LV wall is 3x thicker than this
Foramen ovale
opening in the interatrial septum that shunts blood from the RA to the LA thus routing blood away from the pulmonary circuit
fibrous pericardium
outer layer of pericardium; tough sac of dense connective tissue; lined with the parietal layer of the serous pericardium
sinoatrial node
pacemaker of the heart, generates the cardiac impulse which is a series of self-propagating action potentials (same as nerve impulse)
refractory period
period of time after each contraction that the cardiac (heart) muscle must rest before it will contract again
function of heart skeleton
provide rigid support for the heart
Main Function of the Heart
receive low pressure blood and pump it out at high pressure
diastole
relaxation phase; as a chamber relaxes it fills with blood
epicardium
same as the visceral pericardium (inner part of serous); contains blood vessels (e.g., coronary arteries) and fat
Interatrial Septum
separates atria
Interventricular Septum
separates ventricles
mitral valve
the left AV valve, two cusps, aka bicuspid valve
pericardium
the membrane enclosing the heart, consisting of an outer fibrous layer and an inner double layer of serous membrane.
coronary circulation
the path through which blood flows to and from tissues of the heart
myocardium
thickest layer made up mostly of a highly vascular cardiac muscle; also contains connective tissue, blood supply, and nerves
chordae tendineae
tiny white collagen cords anchoring the cusps to papillary muscles in ventricular walls to keep the valves from being sucked up into atria during contraction
T wave
ventricular diastole=repolarization
QRS
ventricular systole=depolarization
intercalated discs
(junctions between cardiac muscle cells); these contain small tubes that are collectively called gap junctions. The tubes connect the cytoplasm of adjoining cardiac muscle cells
Atrioventricular Node
An electrical "bridge" or coupling that connects the atria with the ventricles b. location: within the interatrial septum near the tricuspid valve
AV node
Function: delay the spread of the cardiac impulse to the ventricles long enough (about 0.1 sec or 100 msec) for the atria to empty and the ventricles to fill
Cardiac Muscle Properties
Myogenic, Long refractory period, high density of mitochondria, Intercalated Discs
atrioventricular valves
One at each junction of atrium and ventricle, prevents back flow of blood.
Artery
Pumps blood away from heart through to capillaries
Path of Cardiac Impulse
SA node (pacemaker) → atrial myocardium (atrial systole) → AV node → AV Bundle and branches → Purkinje fibers of the ventricles → ventricular myocardium (ventricular systole)
Size, Location, Orientation of Heart
Size of a fist, 250-350 grams, within mediastinum, sits obliquely from fifth intercostal space to second rib
cusps
each SLV consists of 3 cup-shaped cusps or flaps (similar to a shirt pocket) 1. the pocket-like cup portion faces away from the ventricles
3 layers of heart wall
epicardium, myocardium, endocardium
Layers of heart wall
epicardium: superficial layer myocardium: middle layer, composed of cardiac muscle, forms bulk of heart endocardium: third layer, deepest, consists of squamous epithelium, lines heart chambers, is located on inner surface of myocardium.
endothelial lining
extends from the inner lining of blood vessels (simple squamous) to line the cavities and cover the valves; the endocardium is a continuation of the endothelial lining of blood vessels
Electrocardiogram (EKG or ECG)
graphical record of cardiac impulse spreading across the heart,
reason for high density of mitochondria
high rate of oxygen-requiring cellular respiration by cardiac muscle cells to meet their ATP demands for contraction; at rest cardiac muscle cells get most of their ATP from the catabolism of fatty acids (60%), glucose (35%), and other organic compounds such as amino acids c. cardiac muscle cells can use almost any fuel substrate: glucose, fatty acids, amino acids, glycerol d. all highly active cells have a lot of mitochondria (heart, neurons, liver, kidney, muscle)
Coverings of the Heart
pericardium, serous pericardium, fibrous pericardium, pericardial cavity
fibrous pericardium
superficial wall of pericardium that protects the heart, anchors to surrounding structures, and prevents the heart from overfilling with blood.
Conduction System
system made up of specialized cardiac muscle cells that do not contract
SA node
cells of the this are "leaky" to Na+ thus they do not have a stable resting membrane potential; they continually depolarize towards threshold potential at regular intervals throughout life
serous pericardium
consists of 2 layers; a visceral layer lies on top of the heart and is also called the epicardium; a parietal layer forms the inner lining of the fibrous pericardium. The pericardial cavity is between the 2 layers of the serous pericardium
SAN
consists of a mass of special myocardial cells embedded in the wall of the right atrium just beneath the opening of the superior vena cava
systole
contraction phase of a heart chamber (atrium or ventricle); as a chamber contracts it empties (atria empty to the ventricles, ventricles empty to the arterial outlets)
gap junctions
allow ions to pass between the cytoplasm of 2 adjacent cells. This is a type of electrical coupling
Semilunar valves
aortic and pulmonary valves
P wave
atrial systole=depolarization
hypertension
can weaken the walls of small arteries and cause aneurysms. It also promotes atherosclerosis which can lead to heart problems