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Cardiac Output. Which Hearts Are Healthy?. End-diastolic volume. Stroke volume. Left Ventricle Volume (ml). End-systolic volume. Stroke Volume?. A. B. C. D. E. Heart Rate (beats/min). 88. 159. 81. 70. 75. Stroke Volume (ml). 92. 100. 67. 79. 70. Cardiac Output (L/min). 8.1.
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End-diastolic volume Stroke volume Left Ventricle Volume (ml) End-systolic volume Stroke Volume?
A B C D E Heart Rate (beats/min) 88 159 81 70 75 Stroke Volume (ml) 92 100 67 79 70 Cardiac Output (L/min) 8.1 15.9 5.4 5.5 5.3 Cardiac Output? HR X SV
What determines the stroke volume? • Preload: how stretched the muscle is when it starts to contract. • Afterload: the active stress the muscle has to generate in order to shorten • Contractility: something else, but what?
fulcrum Preload
The effect of changing preload highest preload lowest preload
Positive inotropism = contractility Normal Negative inotropism = contractility Contractility
Cellular Mechanism of Preload Effect on Strength of Contraction Length sensitivity of cardiac and skeletal muscle result from different mechanisms.
Myosin Heads ThinFilament 1.0 µm Length sensitivity of skeletal muscle Thick Filament 1.6 µm 0.2 µm Optimum Overlap
Length sensitivity of cardiac muscle Skeletal Cardiac
Stretch Muscle How does preload affect force of cardiac muscle contraction? Muscle Length Force of Contraction Cytoplasmic [Ca++] Force of Contraction
Length Sensitivity of Cardiac Muscle • Increased Ca++ entry through Ca++L channels Ca++ • Increased sensitivity of troponin C to Ca++ Troponin Complex Myosin Head Myosin Binding Site
mmHg kPa 16 120 12 80 End-diastolic LV pressure Pressure 8 40 4 0 0 Left Ventricle Volume (ml) 150 100 50 End-diastolic LV volume 0 Preload depends on end-diastolic LV pressure and volume
Right atrial pressure as a measure of preload PRA Systole Diastole
Starling’s Law of the Heart Ventricular Function Curve The inflow equals the output
Increased afterload LV Systolic ejection pressure shorter ejection time reduced stroke volume Afterload depends on systolic ejection pressure mmHg kPa 16 120 12 80 Pressure 8 40 4 0 0 Left Ventricle Volume (ml) 150 100 50 0
mmHg kPa 16 120 12 80 LV Systolic ejection pressure Pressure 8 40 4 0 0 Afterload depends on systolic ejection pressure
Contractility • Anything that influences stroke volume without acting through preload or afterload • Sympathetic Nervous System • Health of Heart Muscle • Coronary Perfusion • Drugs
Contractility “Squeezability”: How tightly can the ventricle squeeze by the end of ejection.
phosphorylates L-type Ca++ channel phosphorylates SR Ca++ ATPase to increase Ca++ reuptake ß-adrenoceptor influence on contractility phosphorylates troponin to desensitize actin Enhanced Relaxation Enhanced Contraction
EKG Pressure Aortic Left ventricular Left ventricular volume Sympathetic Effect on the Heart
Stroke Volume Ejection Fraction = End-Diastolic Volume Measuring ContractilityA. Ejection Fraction Volume Left Ventricle 150 (ml) 100 Stroke Volume End-Diastolic LV Volume 50 0 End-Systolic LV Volume
Stroke Volume Ejection Fraction = End-Diastolic Volume Measuring ContractilityA. Ejection Fraction
mmHg kPa 16 120 12 Slope = LV dP/dt 80 Pressure 8 40 4 0 0 Left Ventricle Volume (ml) 150 100 50 0 Measuring ContractilityB. LV dP/dt Max
A B C D E LV dP/dT 1225 1700 900 1233 1209 Measuring ContractilityB. LV dP/dt Max
Increased contractility Decreased contractility Measuring ContractilityC. Ventricular Function Curve 16 12 Cardiac 8 Output (liters/min) 4 0 0 4 8 12 (mm Hg) (kPa) 0 1 2 Right Atrial Pressure
100 50 0 Measuring ContractilityC. Ventricular Function Curve B A D Stroke E C Volume (ml) (mm Hg) 0 8 16 3 0 1 2 Left Atrial Pressure (kPa)
Measuring Contractility • Ejection Fraction • LV dP/dt max • Ventricular Function Curve • Maximal Systolic Elastance
Diastolic Pressure-Volume Curve Left Ventricular Pressure Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Eccentric (dilated) Normal Stiff Ventricle Diastolic dysfunction Pressure Overload Px r stress = 2h stress = P xr 2h Hypertrophy of Left Ventricle Left Ventricular Pressure Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
End-systolic Pressure Volume Curve Left Ventricular Pressure End-systolic (contracted myocardium) mm Hg kPa 40 300 30 200 20 Diastolic (relaxed myocardium) 100 10 0 0 0 50 100 150 200 Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
elastance The “time-varying elastance” model Left Ventricular Pressure mm Hg kPa 40 300 Emax 30 200 20 100 10 minimum elastance 0 0 0 50 100 150 200 Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Emax “Afterload” Preload Measuring ContractilityD. Emax Left Ventricular Pressure mm Hg kPa Contractility (slope of end-systolic PV line) 40 300 30 200 20 100 10 0 0 0 50 100 150 200 Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
same contractility same afterload Increased preload stroke volume Left Ventricular Pressure Increased Preload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
same contractility increase afterload stroke volume same preload Left Ventricular Pressure Increased Afterload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Preload increased Left Ventricular Pressure Afterload compensation same contractility increase afterload Stroke volume restored Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Hypertension and Cardiac Work Left Ventricular Pressure External Work increase afterload Contraction I Contraction 3 Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Hypertension and Cardiac Work Left Ventricular Pressure Internal work increase afterload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
stroke volume Left Ventricular Pressure Increased Contractility increased contractility same afterload same preload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Left Ventricular Pressure Decreased Contractility decreased contractility same afterload same preload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Preload compensation Left Ventricular Pressure decreased contractility same afterload Left Ventricular Volume (ml)
Which Hearts Are Healthy? A. Pregnant 3rd trimester
Which Hearts Are Healthy? B.Exercising