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Cardiac Output. When the heart contracts. Cardiac Vocabulary. Contractility : Contractility is the intrinsic ability of cardiac muscle to develop force for a given muscle length. Cardiac Vocabulary.
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Cardiac Output When the heart contracts
Cardiac Vocabulary • Contractility: Contractility is the intrinsic ability of cardiac muscle to develop force for a given muscle length.
Cardiac Vocabulary • Preload: Preload is the muscle length prior to contractility, and it is dependent of ventricular filling (or end diastolic volume…EDV) • This value is related to right atrial pressure. • The most important determining factor for preload is venous return.
Cardiac Vocabulary • Afterload: Afterload is the tension (or the arterial pressure) against which the ventricle must contract. • If arterial pressure increases, afterload also increases. • Afterload for the left ventricle is determined by aortic pressure • Afterload for the right ventricle is determined by pulmonary artery pressure.
Cardiac Output Cardiac Output is the volume of blood pumped each minute, and is expressed by the following equation: • CO = SV x HR • Where: • CO is cardiac output expressed in L/min (normal ~5 L/min) • SV is stroke volume per beat • HR is the number of beats per minute
Heart Rate (HR) Heart rate is directly proportional to cardiac output • Adult HR is normally 80-100 beats per minute (bpm.) • Heart rate is modified by autonomic, immune, and local factors. For example: • An increase in parasympathetic activity via M2cholinergicreceptors in the heart will decrease the heart rate. • An increase in sympathetic activity via B1 and B2adrenergicreceptors throughout the heart will increase the heart rate.
Stroke Volume (SV)SV = EDV - ESV • Is determined by three factors: preload, afterload, and contractility. • Preload gives the volume of blood that the ventricle has available to pump • Contractility is the force that the muscle can create at the given length • Afterload is the arterial pressure against which the muscle will contract. • These factors establish the volume of blood pumped with each heart beat.
Cardiac Volumes • SV = end diastolic volume (EDV) - end systolic volume (ESV) • EDV = amount of blood collected in a ventricle during diastole • ESV = amount of blood remaining in a ventricle after contraction
Cardiac Reserve • Cardiac reserve is the difference between resting and maximal CO • Cardiac Output: Example CO (ml/min) = HR (75 beats/min) x SV (70 ml/beat) • CO = 5250 ml/min (5.25 L/min)
Frank – Starling Principle • This principle illustrates the relationship between cardiac output and left ventricular end diastolic volume (or the relationship between stroke volume and right atrial pressure.)
Frank – Starling Principle • The Frank Starling principle is based on the length-tension relationship within the ventricle. • If ventricular end diastolic volume (preload) is increased, it follows that the ventricular fiber length is also increased, resulting in an increased ‘tension’ of the muscle. • Cardiac output is directly related to venous return, the most important determining factor is preload. • The contraction and therefore stroke volume in response to changes in venous return is called the Frank-Starling mechanism (or Starling's Law of the heart).
Regulation of Heart Rate: Autonomic Nervous System • Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) stimulation is activated by stress, anxiety, excitement, or exercise • Parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) stimulation is mediated by acetylcholine and opposes the SNS slowing heart rate • Baroreceptors a. carotid sinus reflex - maintains BP in brain • b. Bainbridge reflex – maintains BP in heart • c. Aortic sinus reflex – maintains BP in aorta
Bainbridge Reflex • Bainbridge (atrial) reflex – a sympathetic reflex initiated by increased blood in the atria • Causes stimulation of the SA node • Stimulates baroreceptors in the atria, causing increased SNS stimulation
Chemical Regulation of the Heart • The hormones epinephrine and thyroxine (T4) increase heart rate • Hormonal Regulation of Blood Pressure 1. Renin 2. ADH 3. Aldosterone • Intra- & extracellular ion concentrations must be maintained for normal heart function
Homeostatic Imbalances • Hypocalcemia – reduced ionic calcium depresses the heart • Hypercalcemia – dramatically increases heart irritability and leads to spastic contractions • Hypernatremia – blocks heart contraction by inhibiting ionic calcium transport • Hyperkalemia – leads to heart block and cardiac arrest
Congestive Heart Failure (CHF) caused by: • Coronary atherosclerosis • Increased blood pressure in aorta • Successive myocardial infarcts • Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM)
Heart Auscultation Aortic Stenosis Normal Heart Beat Mid Systolic Click Diastolic Murmur