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The Heart. Circulatory System. The Cardiovascular System. A closed system of the heart and blood vessels The heart pumps blood Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all parts of the body
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The Heart Circulatory System
The Cardiovascular System • A closed system of the heart and blood vessels • The heart pumps blood • Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all parts of the body • The function of the cardiovascular system is to deliver oxygen and nutrients and to remove carbon dioxide and other waste products
Closed system? • What does it mean to be a “closed system?”
The Heart • Location: • In the thorax • Between the lungs • Pointed apex directed toward left hip • About the size of your fist • Less than 1 lb.
The Heart Figure 11.1
The Heart: Coverings • Pericardium – tissue like sac surrounding the heart • A double membrane made of: • A. Visceral pericardium – thin layer of tissue that hugs the heart • B. Parietal pericardium – fibrous outer layer to protect heart • Fluid fills the space between the layers of pericardium and allows the heart to beat without friction
The Heart: Heart Wall • 3 layers of heart tissue • Epicardium • Outside layer of connective tissue • Myocardium • Middle layer made mostly of cardiac muscle • This is the layer that actually contracts • Endocardium • Thin inner layer that lines heart chambers
The Heart: Chambers • Right and left side act as separate pumps • 4 chambers: • Atria (2) - Receiving chambers • Right atrium • Left atrium • Ventricles (2) - discharging chambers • Right ventricle • Left ventricle
The Heart: Associated Great Vessels • Vena cava – deoxygenated blood enters right atrium • Superior and Inferior • Pulmonary arteries – deoxygenated blood leaves right ventricle • Pulmonary veins (four) – oxygenated blood enters left atrium • Aorta – oxygenated blood leaves left ventricle
The Heart: Valves • Each of the hearts 4 chambers has its own valve • Valves allow blood to flow in only one direction • A. Atrioventricular(AV) valves – located between atria and ventricles • 1. Bicuspid or mitral valve (left side) – made of two flaps of endocardium • 2. Tricuspid valve (right side) – made of three flaps • B. Semilunarvalves – located at the base of two large arteries leaving the ventricles • 3. Pulmonary semilunar valve – made of 3 leaflets • 4. Aortic semilunar valve – made of 3 leaflets
How they work… • AV valves are open when the heart is relaxed and blood is passively filling into the ventricles • Held in place by tendon-like cords • As the ventricles contract, they press on the blood in their chambers which closes the AV flaps • This prevents backflow into the atria • The semilunar valves then open during ventricle contraction
So, does the heart need its own blood for nutrients and oxygen? • We know that the heart pumps blood, but does the heart need blood for itself too? • YES! Of course it does • BUT…. • Blood in the heart chambers DOES NOT nourish the myocardium (heart muscle cells) • So where does the heart get blood?
Cardiac Circulation • The heart has its own nourishing circulatory system • The blood supply that oxygenates and nourishes the heart is provided by: • Coronary arteries • Cardiac veins • Waste products in the blood are then emptied into the right atrium via the coronary sinus
The Heart: Conduction System Intrinsic Conduction System- Heart muscle cells contract, without action potentials, in a regular, continuous way • 1. Sinoatrial node (SA): group of myocytesin the right atirum that conduct AP’s • Also called the “Pacemaker” – generator of heart rhythm • 2. Atrioventricular node (AV) – myocytes located at the junction between the atria and ventricle
Heart Contractions Figure 11.5
The Heart: Conduction System • 3. Bundle of His - a collection of heart muscle cells that transmits AP’s from the AV node to the bundle branches • 4. Bundle branches – long muscle fibers that travel down the inner ventricular walls • 5. Purkinje fibers – muscle fibers located on the lower ventricular walls that allow the ventricles to contract
Heart Contractions Figure 11.5
Electrocardiograms (EKG/ECG) • An interpretation of the electrical activity of the heart captured and recorded by skin electrodes • Three formations: • P wave: impulse across SA node (P) • QRS complex: spread of impulse down AV node (Q), towards Bundle of His (R), down bundle branches, and around ventricles in Purkinje fibers (S) • T wave: end of electrical activity in ventricles