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Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb Hoehn
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Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb Hoehn.

Jan 21, 2016

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Page 1: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

Chapter 18Heart

Lecture 3

Marieb’s HumanAnatomy and

Physiology

Marieb Hoehn

Page 2: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Lecture Overview

• Physiology of cardiac muscle contraction

• The electrocardiogram

• Cardiac Output

• Regulation of the cardiac cycle and cardiac output

Page 3: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Comparison of Skeletal and Cardiac Muscle

Cardiac and skeletal muscle differ in:

1. Nature of action potential

2. Source of Ca2+

3. Duration of contraction

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2001

Let’s look at this more closely

Page 4: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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The Cardiac Muscle Action Potential

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2001

Ca2+ ions enter from

1. Extracellular fluid (20%)

2. Sarcoplasmic reticulum (80%)

** Cardiac muscle is very sensitive to Ca2+ changes in extracellular fluid

Recall that tetanic contractions usually cannot occur in a normal cardiac muscle cell

Page 5: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Electrocardiogram• recording of electrical changes that occur in the myocardium during the cardiac cycle

• used to assess heart’s ability to conduct impulses, heart enlargement, and myocardial damage

P wave – atrial depolarizationQRS wave – ventricular depolarizationT wave – ventricular repolarization

Important points to remember:

- Depolarization precedes contraction- Repolarization precedes relaxation

Three waves per heartbeat

Page 6: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Electrocardiogram

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2001

PR Interval: 0.12 – 0.20 sec

QT Interval: 0.20 – 0.40 sec

QRS Interval: < 0.10 sec

Page 7: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Review of Events of the Cardiac CycleFigure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2004

1. Atrial contraction begins

2. Atria eject blood into ventricles

3. Atrial systole ends; AV valves close (S1)

4. Isovolumetric ventricular contraction

5. Ventricular ejection occurs

6. Semilunar valves close (S2)

7. Isovolumetric relaxation occurs

8. AV valves open; passive atrial filling

S1

S2

Page 8: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Cardiodynamics – Important terms

• End-diastolic volume (EDV) – amount of blood present in the ventricles at end of ventricular diastole (~ 120 ml)

• End-systolic volume (ESV) – amount of blood left in ventricles at end of ventricular systole (~ 50 ml)

• Stroke volume (SV) – amount of blood pumped out of each ventricle during a single beat (SV = EDV – ESV) (~ 70 ml)

• Ejection fraction – Percentage of EDV represented by the SV (SV/EDV) (~ 55%)

Page 9: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Cardiac Output (CO)

• The volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in one minute

CO = heart rate (HR) x stroke volume (SV)

Normal CO 5-6 liters (5,000-6,000 ml) per minute

ml/min beats/min ml/beat

Example: CO = 72 bpm x 75ml/beat 5,500 ml/min

Page 10: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Regulation of Cardiac Output

• physical exercise• body temperature• concentration of various ions

• calcium• potassium

• parasympathetic impulses (vagus nerves) decrease heart action• sympathetic impulses increase heart action; epinephrine

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2001

CO = heart rate (HR) x stroke volume (SV)

SV = EDV – ESV

Page 11: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Regulation of Cardiac RateAutonomic nerve impulses alter the activities of the S-A and A-V nodes

Rising blood pressure stimulates baroreceptors to reduce cardiac output via parasympathetic stimulation

Stretching of vena cava near right atrium leads to increased cardiac output via sympathetic stimulation

Figure from: Hole’s Human A&P, 12th edition, 2010

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Regulation of Cardiac Rate

Parasympathetic impulses reduce CO, sympathetic impulses increase CO

**ANS activity does not ‘make’ the heart beat, it only regulates its beat

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2004

Tachycardia > 100 bpmBradycardia < 60 bpm

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Additional Terms to Know…

• Preload– Degree of tension on heart muscle before it

contracts (i.e., length of sarcomeres)– The end diastolic pressure (EDP)

• Afterload– Load against which the cardiac muscle exerts

its contractile force– Pressure in the artery leading from the ventricle

Page 14: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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The Frank-Starling Mechanism

• Amount of blood pumped by the heart each minute (CO) is almost entirely determined by the venous return

• Frank-Starling mechanism – Intrinsic ability of the heart to adapt to

increasing volumes of inflowing blood– Cardiac muscle reacts to increased stretching

(venous filling) by contracting more forcefully– Increased stretch of cardiac muscle causes

optimum overlap of cardiac muscle (length-tension relationship)

Page 15: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Factors Affecting Cardiac Output

Contractility

Afterload

CVP

CO

HR

SV

ESV

EDV

ANSParasympathetic Sympathetic

CO – Cardiac Output (~5L/min). Dependent upon Stroke Volume (SV; ~70 ml) and Heart Rate (HR)

CVP – Central Venous Pressure; Pressure in vena cava near the right atrium (affects preload; Starling mechanism)

Contractility – Increase in force of muscle contraction without a change in starting length of sarcomeres

Afterload – Load against which the heart must pump, i.e., pressure in pulmonary artery or aorta

ESV – End Systolic Volume; Volume of blood left in heart after it has ejected blood (~50 ml)

EDV – End Diastolic Volume; Volume of blood in the ventricle before contraction (~120-140 ml)

= EDV - ESV

= HR x SV

Figure adapted from: Aaronson & Ward, The Cardiovascular System at a Glance, Blackwell Publishing, 2007

Page 16: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Regulation of Cardiac OutputRecall: SV = EDV - ESV

Figure from: Martini, Anatomy & Physiology, Prentice Hall, 2001

Be sure to review, and be able to use, this summary chart

CO = heart rate (HR) x stroke volume (SV)

Page 17: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Factor Effect on HR and/or SV Effect on Cardiac Output

 DECREASE  

Parasympathetic activity (vagus nerves)

HR

K+ (hyperkalemia) HR and SV (weak, irreg. beats)

K+ (hypokalemia) Irritability

Ca2+ (hypocalcemia) SV (flaccidity)

Decreased temperature HR

 INCREASE

Sympathetic activity HR and SV

Epinephrine HR and SV

Norepinephrine HR

Thyroid hormone HR

Ca2+ (hypercalcemia) SV (spastic contraction)

Rising temperature HR

Increased venous return HR and SV

Summary of Factors Influencing Cardiac Output

Page 18: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Life-Span Changes• deposition of cholesterol in blood vessels

• cardiac muscle cells die

• heart enlarges

• fibrous connective tissue of heart increases

• adipose tissue of heart increases

• blood pressure increases

• resting heart rate decreases

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Review

• Cardiac muscle contraction differs in several important ways from skeletal muscle contraction– Duration of the action potential is longer

– Ca2+ for contraction is derived from the extracellular fluid as well as the sacroplasmic reticulum

– Length of contraction is longer

– Tetany cannot develop due to length of the absolute refractory period

• The electrocardiogram– Measures the electrical changes occurring in the heart

– Is used to assess heart’s ability to conduct impulses, heart enlargement, and myocardial damage

– Depolarization -> contraction, repolarization -> relaxation

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Review• There are three major events (waves) in the ECG

– P wave = atrial depolarization

– QRS complex = ventricular depolarization

– T wave = ventricular repolarization

• The different leads of an ECG can be used to localize heart muscle abnormalities

• Abnormalities in ECG presentation can be indicative of heart damage

• Several common cardiac abnormalities– Arrhythmia

– Tachycardia (and bradycardia)

– Atrial flutter

Page 21: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Review

• Important cardiodynamic terminology– End-diastolic volume (EDV) – amount of blood

left in ventricles at end of ventricular diastole– End-systolic volume (ESV) – amount of blood

left in ventricles at end of ventricular systole– Stroke volume (SV) – amount of blood pumped

out of each ventricle during a single beat (EDV – ESV = SV)

– Ejection fraction – Percentage of EDV represented by the SV

Page 22: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Review

• Cardiac output (CO)– Amount of blood pumped by the heart in one

minute– CO = stroke volume x heart rate– Normal (resting) CO 5-6 L/min

• Factors Affecting CO– Autonomic activity– Hormones– K+, Ca2+ – Venous return

Page 23: Chapter 18 Heart Lecture 3 Marieb’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Marieb  Hoehn.

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Review

• Regulation of Cardiac Output– Heart Rate

• Autonomic tone

• Hormones

• Venous return

– Stroke Volume• Autonomic tone

• Hormones

• Venous return

• Afterload