Human Function Block 2 Lecture 9 (Cardiac Work and Metabolism)

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What are the 4 determinants of myocardial o2 consumption?

HR, wall tension (aortic pressure), SV, and contractility

If you decrease contractility of the heart the O2 consumption

decrease O2 consumption

What do beta blockers do?

decrease intracellular Ca, decrease contractility, decrease HR

What do cardiac glycosides do? What is an example of one?

directly inhibit the Na-K ATPase, which leads to indirect inhibition of Na/Ca exchange--> increased intracellular [Ca++]--> increased cardiac contractility. Digitalis

When would the heart use more carbohydrates as the energy substrate rather than lipids?

exercise, hypoxia, hypertrophy, HF

When would the heart use more lipids as the energy substrate rather than carbohydrates?

fasting, diabetes

An increase in pressure of the ventricle will cause the O2 consumption to ...

greatly increase

Wasted work appears as what?

heat

An increase in HR will cause O2 consumption to

increase linearly

Wall movement is a (major/minor) influence on myocardial O2 consumption

minor

What is propranolol?

non-selective beta blocker

What is timolol?

non-selective beta blocker

What generally causes concentric hypertrophy?

pressure overload (increased after load)

Wasted or Internal work is caused by what?

the heart having to overcome internal resistance

What are the drugs that target calcium channel blockers

verapamil, diltiazem, nifedipine

What are the three ways to increase contractility?

1) Beta adrenergic agonists 2) Cardiac glycosides 3) Phosphodiesterase inhibitors

What type of hypertrophy can you create with exercise?

Eccentric (stretches heart cells length and width)

How much of ATP is use for ion transport?

1/3

Cardiac ATP stores are turned over every ___ seconds?

10

How much of ATP is used for contraction?

2/3

how much fo the total energy is useful?

3-10%

Why do we use the double product more than the tension time index to estimate myocardial metabolism?

Because it is hard to measure ejection duration; Double product=systolic P x HR

Does concentric or eccentric hypertrophy reduce tension per unit cross sectional area?

Concentric because total force is spread out over thicker wall

in what hypertrophy do you see myocyte width larger than myocyte length?

Concentric hypertrophy

What are myocytes preferred energy substrate?

Fatty acids (70% of total ATP)

When would the heart use almost completely carbohydrates as the energy substrate?

Fetal & neonatal

Which is the heart more efficient at preforming: flow work or pressure work?

Flow

What is concentric hypertrophy?

Heart walls thicken greatly, internal radius stays relatively the same

What is eccentric hypertrophy?

Heart walls thicken slightly, internal radius greatly increases

What do beta blockers do to EDV, ESV and stroke volume?

Increase ESV, Increase EDV and decrease SV; Increase MAP, lower contractility

increased aortic pressure results in a disproportionately increase in what?

Internal (wasted) work

What is Tension-Time index a measure of?

It is an index of Myocardial Metabolism; estimate of pressure duration product for venatical per minute

Kinetic work allows the ventricle to do what?

Keep pushing out blood even thought Aorta pressure is higher than LV

Cardiac positive inotropic drugs are given because they do what to EDV, ESV, and the ejection fraction?

Lower EDV and ESV, improve ejection fraction (SV/EDV)

There are two cycles (A and B) in a heart that have the same stroke work. Cycle B uses more pressure to complete the stroke work than cycle A. We know that cycle B must have a (higher/lower) stroke volume and has a (higher/lower) metabolic cost

Lower; Higher

Minute Work =

MAP x CO

Stroke Work =

MAP x SV

What is a phosphodiesterase inhibitor? What is an example of one

Prevents the degradation of cAMP to AMP, Increase [Ca], increase contractility. Amrinone

What is the Tension-Time Index?

TTI= mean systolic pressure x ejection duration x HR

what is the law of LaPlace?

The larger the vessel radius, the larger the wall tension required to withstand a given internal fluid pressure. T=Pr/2h h=(wall thickness)

What generally causes eccentric hypertrophy?

Volume overload

Most of the energy the heart produces appears as what?

Wasted energy, heat

What is carvedilol?

an adrenergic atagonist (alpha and beta blocker)

What is atenolol?

beta 1 antagonist

What is bisoprolol?

beta 1 blocker

What is metoprolol?

beta 1 blocker

What is Dilitiazem?

calcium channel blocker

What is Nifedipine?

calcium channel blocker

What is verapamil?

calcium channel blocker


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