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Anatomy and Function of the Heart. Overview: Double Pump Goal: Push blood through vessels Atria and Ventricles, Heart Valves, Great Vessels Fetal Circulation Cardiac Muscle and Heart Attacks Control of Heart Rhythm. Larry M. Frolich, Ph.D., Yavapai College. Overview—Double Pump.
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Anatomy and Function of the Heart Overview: Double Pump Goal: Push blood through vessels Atria and Ventricles, Heart Valves, Great Vessels Fetal Circulation Cardiac Muscle and Heart Attacks Control of Heart Rhythm Larry M. Frolich, Ph.D., Yavapai College
Overview—Double Pump • Pulmonary Circuit: Right side of heart pumps blood to lungs to pick up oxygen • Systemic Circuit: Left side of heart pumps blood to rest of body to deliver oxygen • Schematic does not show left/right symmetry for most of circulatory system
Goal—push blood through vessels to capillaries • Pulmonary circuit—right side of heart pumps blood through pulmonary arteries to capillaries • Oxygen diffuses into blood and RBC’s in lungs at alveoli surrounded by capillaries • Pulmonary veins return blood to left side of heart • Systemic left side of heart pumps blood through systemic arteries to capillaries • Oxygen diffuses out of blood and into interstitial fluid around cells making oxygen available for cellular metabolism. This is the grand goal of the circulatory system—where the real action happens • Besides oxygen, water, glucose and other nutrients are delivered; CO2, waste products are picked up • Systemic veins return blood to right side of heart
Heart Board Drawing • Apex • Ventral view—ventricles • Interventricular sulcus—between right and left ventricles • Right ventricle leads right into pulmonary trunk (to lungs) • Left ventricle leads into aorta (to systemic circulation) emerging behind pulmonary trunk • Auricle of right atrium • Pulmonary veins entering right atrium on posterior surface • IVC, SVC enter left atrium on posterior surface
Right Atrium • Receives low O2 veinous blood from body (return of systemic circulation • Superiorly SVC (superior vena cava • Inferiorly IVC (inferior vena cava) • Thin muscular wall • At atrial systole, the right atrium contracts pushing blood into right ventricle passing through open right A-V valve (tricuspid valve) • Fossa ovalis is remnant of foramen ovale that shunts fetal blood into left atrium
Right Ventricle • Receives blood passing through open A-V valve from right atrium • At ventricular systole, the right ventricle contracts pushing blood into the pulmonary trunk passing through the open right semi-lunar valve (pulmonary valve) • As the ventricle begins to contract, the blood pushes against the cusps of the A-V valve causing it to snap shut preventing blood from back-flowing into the right atrium (“lub…”) • The papillary muscles then contract and pull on the chordae tendinae attached to the valve cusps so they don’t get over-extended into the atrium • As ventricle relaxes into diastole, the right semilunar valve (pulmonary valve) snaps shut keeping blood from back-flowing back into the ventricle (“…dub”)
Left Atrium • Receives high O2 veinous blood from lungs (return of systemic circulation • Pulmonary veins—2 from left lung, 2 from right lung • At atrial systole, the left atrium contracts pushing blood into left ventricle passing through open left A-V valve (bicuspid or mitral valve)
Left Ventricle • Receives blood passing through open A-V valve from left atrium • At ventricular systole, the left ventricle contracts pushing blood into the aorta passing through the open left semi-lunar valve (aortic valve) • As the ventricle begins to contract, the blood pushes against the cusps of the A-V valve causing it to snap shut preventing blood from back-flowing into the left atrium (“lub…”) • The papillary muscles then contract and pull on the chordae tendinae attached to the valve cusps so they don’t get over-extended into the atrium • As ventricle relaxes into diastole, the left semilunar valve (aortic valve) snaps shut keeping blood from back-flowing back into the ventricle (“…dub”)
Fetal Circulation • No circulation to lungs—why? • Foramen ovale shunts blood from right atrium to left atrium • Ductus arteriosum shunts blood from pulmonary artery to aortic arch • Circulation must go to placenta • Umbilical aa., vv.
Coronary arteries and circulation to the heart • Coronary arteries supply blood to heart muscle • Come directly off of aorta as it leaves the heart from large high pressure aorta to small left and right coronary arteries • Heart attack is loss of blood supply to heart muscle • Blockage usually occurs in first two centimeters of coronary arteries • Treatment can be angioplasty, stint, bypass
Cardiac Muscle • Usually 1 nucleus, sometimes several • Much thinner than skeletal muscle (20 um versus 100 um) • Intercalated disks pass action potential from cell to cell—most cells have no direct motor neuron connection • Energy source is mostly lipids • Calcium to trigger actin-myosin cross-bridge formation and muscle cell contraction comes from outside cell as part of action potential as well as from sarcoplasmic reticulum A and P I Tissue Review—3 types of muscle tissue
Control of heart rhythm • Heart receives visceral motor innervation • Sympathetic (speeds up) • Parasympathetic (slows down) • Input is from chemoreceptors and baroreceptors
Input on blood pressure to brain • Chemoreceptors • aortic bodies, carotid bodies • Sense CO2, pH, O2 • Barroreceptors • stretch receptors sense blood pressure pushing on vessel wall • aortic sinus, carotid sinus Bonus A and P I Review: Cranial Nerve that carries aortic receptor input to brain? Cranial Nerve that carries carotid receptor input to brain? X. Vagus IX. Glossopharyngeal
A and P I Review Sympathetic = “fight or flight” = NE (norepinephrine) Parasympathetic = calming = ACH (acetylcholine) Reflexive output: heart rate • Baro- and chemo-receptor input arrives to medulla oblongata (A and P I review!) • Autonomic motor output (A and P I review) to AV node of heart • Sympathetic will speed heart rate (where do sympathetic neurons originate? What is path to heart? • Parasympathetic will slow heart (where do parasympathetic neurons originate? What is path to heart?) • Bonus (common sense physiology!): Will blood vessels constrict or dilate with sympathetic response?
Electrocardiogram • Surface electrodes measure sum total of action potentials in cardiac muscle • Distinct wave forms for atrial, ventricular depolarization • Intervals as well as wave forms important in interpretation Demo in Lab
Location of Heart in Thorax Heart Dissection Lab