Heart and Blood Vessels
Sinoatrial node
"cardiac pacemaker." A small mass of cardiac muscle cells located near the junction of the right atrium and the superior vena cava. Stimulus that starts a heartbeat begins here.
In what ways do the veins pump blood back to the heart?
1. contractions of the skeletal muscles 2. one way valves permit only one way blood flow 3. movements associated with breathing
Precapillary Sphincter
A band of smooth muscle right where the arteriole joins the capillary. Serve as gates that control blood flow into individual capillaries.
Cardiac Conduction System
A group of specialized cardiac muscle cells that initiate and distribute electrical impulses throughout the heart. Stimulate the heart to contract in an orderly sequence.
Pericardium
A tough fibrous sac that the heart is inside of. It protects the heart, anchors it to surrounding structures, and prevents it from overfilling with blood.
Arrhythmia
Abnormality of the rhythm or rate of the heartbeat.
Left ventricle
After passing through the left atrium, blood passes through here. Most muscular chamber because does more work than any other chamber and pumps blood into the aorta.
Right ventricle
After passing through the right atrium, blood passes through here next. More muscular than the right atrium because it pumps blood at considerable pressure through a second valve and into artery leading to lungs.
What's so good about the pores and slits in a capillary?
Allow for blood to exchange oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients, and waste products.
Xenotransplant
An organ from another species. Still in the research stage, not approved for human use.
_ blood pressure is held constant, and local blood flows are _ to meet local requirements.
Arterial; adjusted
The first step of the cardiac cycle
Atrial systole- -both atrias contract -forces blood into ventricles -Av valves open -semilunar valves are closed
Aneurysm
Ballooning of the artery wall when endothelium becomes damaged and blood seeps through the injured area and goes between the two outer layers, splitting them apart. Very serious
Atrioventricular node
Between atria and ventricles. Electrical impulse goes from atria to here. Smaller muscle fibers= slight delay that gives the atria time to contract and empty their blood into the ventricles before the ventricles contract.
Embolism
Blockage of a blood vessel by material floating in the blood stream
Left atrium
Blood returning from the lungs to the heart enters here.
Right atrium
Blood that is returning to the heart from the body enters the heart here.
Where are baroreceptors located?
Carotid arteries and aorta
Angina
Chest pains from narrowed arteries and decreased blood flow to heart
Cardiac veins
Collect the blood from the capillaries in the heart muscle and channel it back to the right atrium.
Stroke
Damage to part of the brain caused by impairment of blood supply to brain
The third step of the cardiac cycle
Diastole- -Both atria and ventricles are relaxed -pressure falls
Cardiac muscle
Doesn't connect to bone. Pumps ceaselessly in a squeezing motion to propel blood through blood vessels.
Capillary Beds
Extensive networks of capillaries that can be found in all areas of the body.
Atrioventricular bundle
Group of conducting fibers in the septum between the two ventricles. , Specialized muscle fibers connecting the atria with the ventricles and transmitting impulses between them
Myocardial Infarction
Heart Attack!! Sudden death of an area of heart tissue due to lack of oxygen
Systemic circuit
Heart is pumping blood through the rest of the body to cells
Heart failure
Heart muscles become damaged and heart becomes weaker and less efficient at pumping blood
Pulmonary Circuit
Heart pumping blood through the lungs
Congestive heart failure
Heart pumps less blood, so blood backs up in veins, pressure in veins and capillaries rise, causes more fluid than usual to filter out of capillaries and into interstitial fluid. build up of interstitial fluid
Lumen
Hollow interior of the vessel
Endocardium
Inner most layer of the heart. A thin endothelial later resting on a layer of connective tissue.
Why does the left ventricle have to be more muscular than the other chambers?
It must generate pressures higher than aortic blood pressure in order to pump blood into the aorta
What role does the lymphatic system play in the vascular system?
It removes excess fluid
Arteries
Large, muscular, thick walled tubes that transport blood away from the heart.
Endothelium
Layer of flattened squamous epithelial cells. A continuation of the lining of the heart. Flattened cells fit closely together, creating a slick surface that decreases friction and helps smooth blood flow.
Bicuspid or mitral valve
Left AV valve that has two flaps
Hypotension
Low blood pressure. Usually only a problem if it falls low enough to reduce blood flow to brain.
Myocardium
Middle layer of the heart. A thick layer consisting mainly of cardiac muscle that forms the bulk of the heart. This is what contracts during a heart beat.
Papillary muscles
Muscular extensions of the ventricle walls that help the chordae tendineae prevent the valves from opening backward into the atria when the muscles contract.
Septum
Muscular partition that separates the right and left sides of the heart.
What are the arteries like near the heart and farther away from the heart?
Near the heart, they are larger with thicker muscle so they can withstand the high pressures generated by the heart. The farther away from the heart, the smaller the arteries are.
Varicose Veins
Permanently swollen veins that look twisted and bumpy from pooled blood. People who spend a lot of time on their feet.
Semilunar valves
Pulmonary and aortic valves. Prevent back flow into the ventricles from the main arteries leaving the heart when the heart relaxes. Each has three pocketlike flaps.
Baroreceptors
Regions in large arteries that regulate arterial blood pressure
Vasodilation
Relaxation of vascular smooth muscle. Increases their diameter and so increases blow flow into capillaries.
Pericardial cavity
Separates the pericardium from the heart. Contains a film of lubricating fluid that reduces friction and allows the heart and the pericardium to glide smoothly against each other when the heart contracts.
Venules
Small veins
What is the middle layer of an artery made out of?
Smooth muscle with elastic fibers. Thickest layer. Elastic in large/medium arteries so they can stretch to accommodate blood.
Which kind of nerves stimulate the heart and cause it to beat FASTER?
Sympathetic. also controls blood vessel diameters.
Isolated systolic hypertension
Systolic pressure registers at above normal levels and diastolic pressure remains normal.
Why do heart attacks cause permanent damage?
The body can't replace cardiac muscle cells
Why is the recovery rate of a stroke poor?
The body doesn't grow new nerve cells to replace damaged ones
Why do the lower part of the ventricles contract before the upper part?
The electrical impulse travels down the septum to the lower portion of the ventricles first and then spreads rapidly upward
Cardiac cycle
The entire sequence of contraction and relaxation
Blood pressure
The force that blood exerts on the wall of a blood vessel as a result of the pumping action of the heart.
Systolic pressure
The highest pressure of the cycle. The pressure reached during ventricular systole when the ventricles contract to eject blood from the heart.
Sphygmomanometer
The inflatable cuff device placed over the brachial artery in upper arm and connected to a pressure-measuring device
Diastolic pressure
The lowest pressure that occurs during ventricular diastole when the ventricles relax.
Where is the cardiovascular center located in the brain?
The medulla oblongata
Epicardium
The outermost layer of the heart. A thin later of epithelial and connective tissue.
Systole
The period of contraction
Diastole
The period of relaxation
Why don't veins need as much wall strength as arteries?
The pressure in veins, since they are far from the heart, is only a small fraction of what it is in arteries.
Tricuspid valve
The right AV valve that has three flexible flaps.
Capillaries
The smallest blood vessels. Thin walls. Act as a strainer: They permit selective exchange of substances with the interstitial fluid. The only blood vessels that can exchange with interstitial fluid.
Arterioles
The smallest of arteries. Lack the outermost layer of connective tissue, and their smooth muscle isn't as thick.
Atria (atrium)
The two chambers on top.
The second step of the cardiac cycle
The ventricular systole- -Contraction spreads to ventricles, both contract at same time -AV valves close -semilunar valves open -Blood is ejected to pulmonary trunk and aorta
What do the arterioles do that large arteries don't?
They help regulate the amount of blood that flows to each capillary. They do this by contracting or relaxing the smooth muscle.
What's the problem with artificial hearts?
They're only temporary solution until you can find a real heart.
What's the outer layer of a large/medium sized artery made out of?
Tough supportive layer of connective tissue, mostly collagen. Protects vessels from injury by anchoring them to surrounding tissues.
Murmurs
Unusual heart sounds caused by disturbed blood flow
Veins
Walls contain three layers of tissue but the outer two layers are much thinner than that of arteries. Veins also have a larger diameter lumen that allows them to stretch to accommodate large volumes of blood at low pressures. 2/3 of all your blood is stored in your veins.
How to the baroreceptors help regulate arterial blood pressure?
When blood pressure rises, the baroreceptors stretch which causes them to send signals via nerves to the cardiovascular center of the brain. This center sends signals to the heart and blood vessels to lower heart rate. Arterioles vasodilate (increase in diameter)
Pulse
Where you can feel this cycle of rapid expansion and recoil in the wall of an artery when its located close to the skin's surface
Cardiac output
amount of blood that the heart pumps into the aorta each minute. calculated by multiplying heart rate by stroke volume (volume of blood pumped out with each heartbeat)
pulmonary embolism
blocks an artery flowing to the lungs= chest pain and shortness of breath
Cardiac embolism
can cause heart attack
Hypertension
high blood pressure
cerebral embolism
impairs circulation to brain
the suffix "itis" refers to
inflammation of a certain part of the heart
Atrioventricular valves
located between the atria and their corresponding ventricle prevent blood from flowing back into the atria when the ventricles contract. Thin connective tissue flaps (cusps) that project into ventricles.
What is blood pressure recorded as?
mm Hg (milimeters of mercury)
Which nerves cause it to beat slower?
parasympathetic
Electrocardiogram (ECG)
record of electrical impulses in the cardiac conduction system. Electrodes placed on skin at chest wrist and ankles. Electrodes transmit the hearts electrical impulses that are recorded as a continuous line on a screen
Homeostatic regulation of the cardiovascular system centers on maintaining what?
relatively constant arterial blood pressure
Purkinje fibers
smaller fibers that carry the impulse to all cells in the myocardium of the ventricles
Chordae tendineae
strands of connective tissue that support the AV valves that connect to papillary muscles.
local factors regulate blood flow into individual capillaries by altering_
the diameters of precapillary sphincters
Coronary arteries
the heart's own set of blood vessels that supply the heart muscle.
Ventricles
the two more muscular bottom chambers.
Why is hypertension called the silent killer
usually it has no symptoms