Heart pt 2: Function
Dec 27, 2015
Cardiac Cycle
• The heart goes through the cardiac cycle to contract and pump blood through the body efficiently
• The cycle is deemed to start when the sinoatrial node (SA node) initiates an action potential
• The SA node is the pacemaker of the heart and is influenced by the sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems
SA node to AV node• The SA node stimulates the
atria to contract, filling the ventricles
• The SA node also stimulates the AV node which then stimulates the ventricles– This delay allows the ventricles
to fully fill up before initiating ventricular contraction
• If the SA node fails the AV node can take over but the ventricles don’t fill all the way
Completion of Contraction• Once the AV node has delayed
the signal for a moment it transmits it to the AV bundles, which go through the septum of the heart
• At the base of the ventricles the AV bundles become the bundle branches that innervate the ventricles
• Ventricles contract, closing AV valves and forcing blood out the aorta and pulmonary trunk
Ventricular Pressure• When the ventricles
contract, they squeeze blood at a high pressure into the major arteries
• The pressure in the major arteries is approximately equivalent to the pressure in the heart– 120/80 means peak pressure
of 120 when the left ventricle squeezes, 80 when it relaxes
– These are also called systole and diastole
Systole and Diastole
• Systole is the maximum blood pressure caused by a chamber’s squeezing• Atrial systole is followed by
ventricular systole• When the ventricles are refilling it
is known as diastole (minimum blood pressure)
• 120/80 is average healthy blood pressure• Varies somewhat by age, size, etc.
Measuring Blood Pressure• The theory behind measuring blood pressure works on
two principles:1. The pressure in the major arteries is approximately
equivalent to the left ventricle2. When the external squeezing pressure on an artery is
greater than its blood pressure, the blood flow stops• When the arm cuff cuts off blood pressure entirely, this
is systolic pressure• When the arm cuff allows all blood to flow again, this
is diastolic pressure– In between these two points, blood only squirts through
at diastole but not systole which makes a distinctive sound
Blood Volume and Pressure• The more blood is in the blood
vessels, the harder the heart has to work to pump it– High blood pressure can result
from excess of water (usually from eating too much salt)
– Low blood pressure can result from not enough salt, blood loss, or dehydration
• Excess high blood pressure (hypertension) can eventually overwork the heart
Electrocardiogram• The electrocardiogram (EKG or ECG) is the famous
“beep beep” in the hospital• Measures the electrical activity of the heart– First small wave (P wave) corresponds to SA node
depolarizing– Large wave (QRS complex) corresponds to AV node and
ventricles depolarizing– Second small wave (T wave) is repolarization of ventricles
• If the SA node fails, the p wave disappears and the AV node becomes the pacemaker (junctional rhythm)– Time for an artificial pacemaker!
Cardiac Output
• The total volume of blood that is pumped by each ventricle per minute is the cardiac output (CO)– Fun fact: the CO of the left and
right ventricles should be the same! Think about it!
• Affected by stroke volume (amount of blood pumped per beat) and heart rate– These are affected by the overall
health, activity, and autonomic nervous systems