BMS 251 Chapter 19 Questions
What type of heart valve is associated with tendinous cords?
AV Valves
What occurs when the ventricles contract
AV valves close Semilunar valves open blood is ejected into the aorta
What occurs during the atrial reflex
An increase of heart rate occurs in response to an increase in blood volume within the atria
What are the functions of the three different types of blood vessels?
Arteries carry blood away from the heart, veins carry blood back to the heart, and capillaries are sites of gas exchange
What is happening mechanically during the Q-T complex of an ECG?
Atrial depolarization, ventricular depolarization, ventricular repolarization
Depolarization of cardiac muscle cells is caused by
Calcium channels closing
What is the function of the coronary sulcus?
Coronary arteries rest in the coronary sulcus to supply blood to the heart. The atria are separated from the ventricles externally by the coronary sulcus
What is the cardioinhibitory center and where is it located?
Decreases heart rate and is located in the medulla oblongata
What ionic event creates the depolarization phase of an nodal cells action potential?
Fast voltage-gated Ca2+ channels open and Ca2+ flows in
Preload is a measure of
Heart chamber volume prior to contraction
What is the difference between neuron depolarization and nodal cell depolarization?
In neurons, action potential depolarization is from Na+ entry; in nodal cells it is from Ca2+ entry
How does venous return affect total stroke volume
Increase in exercise causes an increase in venous return, which increases stroke volume
Positive chronotropic agents function by
Increasing cardiac output by boosting heart rate
Describe the structure and function of intercalated discs in cardiac muscle tissue
Intercalated disks tightly link the cardiac muscle cells together and permit the passage of action potentials
Bradycardia can be caused by
Introduction of acetycholine
During which stage of the cardiac cycle are all chambers relaxed and all valves closed?
Isovolumetric relaxation
Where around the heart is the serous fluid located?
Pericardial cavity
Sarcolemma of a cardiac muscle cell is equivalent to what structure of a typical cell?
Plasma membrane
In which wave of an ECG can ventricular systole be seen?
QRS complex
What is the circulation sequence for blood to pass through part of the heart?
Right atrium, right AV valve, Right Ventricle, pulmonary semilunar valve
What is the structures of the conduction system in order?
SA node, AV node, AV bundle, Purkinje fibers
What is the mediastinum?
Space between lungs
an increase in heart rate is caused by
Sympatheic firing of the medulla oblongata
Define cardiac output
The amount of blood pumped by a single ventricle in 1 minute
What different functions are served by the left and right sides of the heart?
The right side receives deoxygenated blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs. The left side receives oxygenated blood from the lungs and pumps it to the body.
Why are chordae tendineae required for the proper functioning of AV valves?
This prevents the valve from inverting and being pushed open
Explain why the walls of the atria are thinner than those of the ventricles, and why the walls of the right ventricle are relatively thin when compared to the walls of the left ventricle?
Ventricles pump the blood. The right ventricle pumps blood through pulmonary circuit. The left ventricle pumps blood through the systemic circuit. Systemic circulation requires more contractile force.
What voltage-gated ion channels are open during repolarization of cardiac muscle cells?
Voltage-gated K+ channels
Atherosclerosis can directly increases
afterload
Which valve will prevent blood from flowing backward from the left ventricle
aortic semilunar valve
Calcium channels in the nodal cells function to
causes depolarization and initiate cardiac action potential
How is blood prevented from back flowing from the pulmonary trunk into the right ventricle?
closing the the pulmonary semilunar valve
What two functions do intercalated disks serve?
connecting cells, communication
What type of vessels deliver blood to the heart tissue?
coronary arteries
Venous blood draining the heart wall enters the right atrium through the
coronary sinus
If cardiac muscle were weakened, would SV increase or decrease?
decrease
What is the inner layer of the heart wall?
endocardium
Heart murmur in an infant can be caused by
foramen ovale
What occurs if the foramen oval of the heart does not occur at birth?
heart murmur
How do positive chronotropic agents affect cardiac output?
increase heart rate
How does the heart respond to increased venous return?
increase stroke volume
Action potentials are spread rapidly between cardiac muscle cells by
intercalated discs
What units are used in measurements of perfusion?
mL/min/g
What is the appropriate unit for measuring cardiac output
ml/minute
What type of heart cell is influenced by chronotropic agents? Nodal cells or cardiac cells?
nodal cell
The pericardial cavity is located between the
parietal and visceral layers of the serous pericardium
Basic pattern of heart structures in order according to blood flow
right heart, lungs, left heart, systemic tissues, right heart
What heart valves are open during ventricular ejection?
semilunar valve
Which of the two autonomic nervous system divisions has an effect on the force of heart contraction?
sympathetic
Another term for the sinoatrial node is
the pacemaker
Why is it necessary to stimulate papillary muscles in the ventricle slightly earlier than the rest of the ventricular wall myocardium?
to pull on the AV cusps to prevent back flow