power point the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

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The Cardiovascular System Anatomy and Physiology

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Page 1: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

The Cardiovascular System

Anatomy and Physiology

Page 2: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Is about 4.8 inches tall and 3.35 inches wide Weighs about .68 lb. in men and .56 lb. in women Beats about 100,000 times per day Beats 2.5 billion time in an average 70 yr. lifetime Pumps about 2000 gallons of blood each day Circulates blood completely 1000 times each day Pumps blood through 62,000 miles of vessels Suffers 7.2 mil. CAD deaths worldwide each year

The Heart

Page 3: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

The heart resides in the pericardiumo A loose membranous sac.

Epicardium ◦ Continuous with the pericardium

Myocardium ◦ Composed of bands of involuntary striated

muscle fibers Endocardium

◦ Thin layer of tissue lining the inside of the heart

Three Layers of The Heart

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Atria

◦ Thin-walled upper chambers

◦ Separated by atrial septum

◦ Right side of septum has oval depression, fossa ovalis cordis, remnant of the foramen ovale

◦ Act as receiving chamber for blood returning from the body and lungs

Four Chambers of The Heart

Page 5: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Left atriumFossa ovalis cordis

Right atriumAtrial septum

EpicardiumMyocardiumEndocardium

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Ventricles

◦ Lower chambers which make up the bulk of the muscle mass of the heart

◦ Left ventricle 2/3 larger than right ventricle

◦ Right ventricle is a thin-walled and oblong, like pocket attached to left ventricle

Four Chambers of The Heart

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Ventricles

◦ Contraction of left ventricle pulls in right ventricle, aiding its contraction (termed left ventricular aid)

◦ Separated by intraventricular septum

Four Chambers of The Heart

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Right ventricle

Left ventricle

Intraventricular septum

Superior vena cava

Inferior vena cava

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Four Valves of the Heart

Tricuspid valve

◦ Separates right atrium from right ventricle

Pulmonic semilunar valve

◦ Separates right ventricle from pulmonary artery

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Four Valves of the Heart

Bicuspid (mitral) valve

◦ Separates left atrium from left ventricle

Aortic semilunar valve

◦ Separates left ventricle from aorta

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Blood flow from right ventricle to lungs Blood flow from left ventricle to aorta

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Four Valves of the Heart

Chordae tendineae cordis

◦ Anchor free ends of A-V valves to papillary muscles

◦ Prevent A-V valves from pushing upward into atria during ventricular contraction

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Aortic semilunar valvePulmonic semilunar valve

Bicuspid (mitral) valveTricuspid valveChordae tendineae cordis

Papillary muscles

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Cardiac Circulation

Pulmonary artery to left lungPulmonary Artery to right lung

Pulmonary veins from left lung

Pulmonary veins from right lung

Superior vena cava

Aorta

Brachiocephalic artery

Left common carotid artery

Left subclavian artery

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Coronary Circulation Arises from root of the aorta

Left Coronary Artery Right Coronary Artery

Anterior Descending Artery

Circumflex Artery

Posterior Descending Artery

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Circulation of the Blood

1) Blood enters the heart through the inferior and superior vena cava, flowing into the right atrium.

2) The blood passes through the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle.

3) It then passes through the pulmonic semilunar valve, entering the pulmonary artery of the pulmonary circulation.

4) It flows through the pulmonary bed of the right and left lungs to the pulmonary vein, reentering the heart at the left atrium.

5) It then flows through the bicuspid valve into the left ventricle.

6) Passing through the aortic semilunar valve, the blood enters the aorta and systemic vascular system.

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Anterior descending artery

◦ Supplies anterior sulcus and apex

◦ “Widow maker” heart attack

Circumflex artery

◦ Supplies posterior side of left ventricle

Left Coronary Artery

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Together supply most of left ventricle, left atrium, 2/3 of intra ventricular septum, half of intra atrial septum, and part of right atrium

Left Coronary Artery

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Anterior View

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Posterior View

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Posterior descending artery

◦ Supplies posterior intraventricular sulcus

Has numerous smaller branches

Right Coronary Artery

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Supplies anterior and posterior portions of right ventricular myocardium, right atrium, sinus node, posterior 1/3 of intraventricular septum, and portion of base of right ventricle

Right Coronary Artery

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Closely parallel the arterial system

Some coronary venous blood enters the heart through the Thebesian veins

◦ Thebesian veins empty directly into all chambers thus creating some venous admixture lowering Pa02

Coronary Veins

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Blood Vessels

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Large, highly elastic, low resistance to blood flow

Small muscular arterioles of varying resistance

The Vascular System-Arterial

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Transport blood away from the heart

Generally contain oxygenated blood Exception: pulmonary artery

Composed of three layers◦Tunica adventitia (external layer)◦Tunica media (thickest layer)◦Tunica intima (thinnest layer)

The Vascular System-Arterial

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Tunica adventitia◦Consists of connective tissue surrounding

collagenous and elastic fibers◦Supports and protects the vessel◦Contains lymphatic vessels and nerve

fibers◦Has fine vessels that provide its blood

supply

The Vascular System-Arterial

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Tunica media◦Thickest layer◦Composed of concentrically arranged

smooth muscle and elastic fibers◦Nerve fibers of tunica adventitia

terminate in tunica media

The Vascular System-Arterial

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Tunica intima◦Thinnest layer of the artery◦Consists of the epithelium – flat layer of

simple squamous cells◦Common to all blood vessels including

the endocardium

The Vascular System-Arterial

Page 30: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Large arteries are termed conductance or elastic arteries because the tunica media has less smooth muscle and more elastic fibers

Medium sized arteries are termed the nutrient arteries because they control the flow of blood to the various regions of the body

Arterioles have a thin tunica intima and adventitia, but a thick tunica media composed almost entirely of smooth muscle and control blood flow to the capillary bed◦ Called resistance vessels because they control the

rate that the blood leaves the arterial tree , control arterial blood volume and thereby blood pressure

The Vascular System-Arterial

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AortaBrachial

Radial

Ulnar

Femoral

Anterior tibial

Peroneal artery

Posterior tibial

Aortic knob

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Circle of Willis

Internal carotidsExternal carotids

Common carotidsVertebral arteries

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Microcirculation Maintains constant environment for the cells and

tissues Exchange of nutrients, gases, and wastes

The Vascular System-Capillary

The blood does not directly come in contact with the parenchymal cells and tissues in the body, but constituents of the blood first exit the micro vascular exchange blood vessels to become interstitial fluid, which comes into contact with the parenchymal cells of the body. Lymph is the fluid that is formed when interstitial fluid enters the initial lymphatic vessels of the lymphatic system

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Pre-capillary sphincter valves◦ Smooth muscle rings at the proximal end of the

capillary◦ Contraction decreases blood flow◦ Relaxation increases blood flow◦ Responsive to local changes in PaO2, PaCO2, pH,

and temperature◦ Called exchange vessels because they are the

site of gas, fluid, nutrient, and waste exchange

The Vascular System-Capillary

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The Vascular System-Capillary

Page 37: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Transport deoxygenated blood back to the heart – exception: pulmonary vein

Composed of the same layers as arteries, but are thinner Called capacitance or reservoir vessels because 70% to

75% of the blood volume is contained in the venous system Peripheral veins contain one-way valves.

◦ Valves are formed by duplication of endothelial lining◦ Found in veins >2mm in diameter◦ Are in areas subjected to muscular pressure, arms/legs◦ Prevent retrograde flow of blood

The Vascular System-Venous

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Mechanisms aiding venous return to the heart:◦ Sympathetic venous tone◦ Skeletal muscle pumping or “milking” combined

with the one-way valves◦ Cardiac suction◦ Thoracic pressure differences created by

respiratory efforts (thoracic pump)

The Vascular System-Venous

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The Vascular System

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Histological Structure of Blood Vessels

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Blood

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Consists of formed elements (cells) suspended & carried in plasma (fluid part)

Total blood volume: 60-80 mL/kg of body weight

Plasma is straw-colored liquid consisting of 90% H20 & dissolved solutes◦ Includes ions, metabolites, hormones, antibodies,

proteins

Composition of Blood

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Constitute 7-9% of plasma Three types of plasma proteins: albumins,

globulins, & fibrinogen◦ Albumin accounts for 60-80%

Creates colloid osmotic pressure that draws H20 from interstitial fluid into capillaries to maintain blood volume & pressure

Globulins carry lipids◦ Gamma globulins are antibodies

Fibrinogen serves as clotting factor◦ Converted to fibrin when clotting blood ◦ Serum is fluid left when blood clots

Plasma Proteins

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Composed of erythrocytes (RBCs) & leukocytes (WBCs)

RBCs are flattened biconcave discs◦ Generated in the red bone marrow by

the process of erythropoiesis from the hemocytoblast, a common stem cell

◦ Shape provides increased surface area for diffusion

◦ Lack nuclei & mitochondria◦ Has semi-permeable membrane◦ Contains hemoglobin molecule that

transports oxygen◦ Approx. 30 trillion in the body

Formed Elements

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Is the formation of blood cells from stem cells in marrow (myeloid tissue) & lymphoid tissue◦ RBC’s increase in number above normal with

chronic hypoxia Erythropoiesis is formation of RBCs

◦ Stimulated by erythropoietin (EPO) from kidney Leukopoiesis is formation of WBCs

◦ Stimulated by variety of cytokines

Hematopoiesis

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2.5 million RBCs created daily

Lifespan of 120 days Old RBCs removed

from blood by phagocytic cells in liver, spleen, & bone marrow◦ Iron recycled back

into hemoglobin production

Erythropoiesis

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Have nucleus, mitochondria, & amoeboid ability

Formed in the myeloid tissue Can squeeze through capillary walls

(diapedesis)◦ Granular leukocytes help detoxify foreign

substances & release heparin Include eosinophils, basophils, & neutrophils

Leukocytes

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Agranular leukocytes are phagocytic & produce antibodies

Include lymphocytes & monocytes

Leukocytes

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Specialized type of blood cell Fragments into small irregular pieces of

protoplasm called thrombocytes and platelets

Have no nucleus Have a granular cytoplasm Function in clot formation

Megakaryocyte

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Are smallest of formed elements, lack nucleus

Constitute most of mass of blood clots

Release serotonin to vasoconstrict & reduce blood flow to clot area

Secrete growth factors to maintain integrity of blood vessel wall

Survive 5-9 days

Platelets (thrombocytes)

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RBC’s – Males: 4.6 - 6.2 x 10 /mm Females: 4.2 – 5.4 x 10 /mm• Hb – Males: 13.5 – 16.5 g/dl

Females: 12 – 15 g/dl• Hematocrit – Males: 42 – 54% Females: 38 – 47% • Leukocytes – 4500 – 11,500/mm

Normal Values

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Neutrophils: 40 – 75% Eosinophils: 0 – 6% Monocytes: 2 – 10% Basophils: 0 – 1% Megakaryocyte: 150,000 – 400,000/mm

Normal Values

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Systolic pressure

◦ Pressure during contraction phase of heart

◦ Normal value: 90 – 140 mmHg

Diastolic pressure

◦ Pressure during relaxation phase of heart

◦ Normal value: 60 – 90 mmHg

The Vascular System-Blood Pressure

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Mean arterial pressure (MAP)

◦ Average pressure in the arterial system over a given time

◦ Normal value: 80 – 100 mmHg

The Vascular System-Blood Pressure

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Mean arterial pressureMAP = (2 x diastolic pressure) + (systolic pressure)

3A MAP of approximately 60 mmHg is necessary to

perfuse coronary arteries, brain, kidneys.

The Vascular System-Blood Pressure

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Reflects right atrial pressure Influenced by changes in right ventricular

function Measured with catheter placed in superior

vena cava just above right atrium

Central Venous Pressure (CVP)

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Purpose◦ Assess blood volume status◦ Administration of fluids◦ Sampling of blood◦ Measurement of SvO2◦ Assessment of right ventricular pre-load

Normal valueoCVP: < 6 mmHgoRight atrial pressure (RAP): 2-6 mmHg

Central Venous Pressure (CVP)

Page 58: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Used to assess filling pressure of the left side of heart

Measured by flow-directed, balloon-tipped catheter

Measures◦ Pulmonary artery pressures – systolic, diastolic,

mean◦ Right ventricular preload (via right atrial pressure)◦ Right ventricular afterload (via PA systolic

pressure)

Pulmonary Artery Pressure

Page 59: Power point   the cardiovascular system - anatomy and physiology

Normal values

◦ Pulmonary artery pressure, systolic: 20-30 mmHg◦ Pulmonary artery pressure, diastolic: 6-15 mmHg◦ Pulmonary artery pressure, mean: 10-20 mmHg◦ Pulmonary artery wedge pressure, mean:

4-12 mmHg

Pulmonary Artery Pressure

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Total amount of blood pumped by the heart per minute

Cardiac Output = Heart Rate x Stroke

Volume

Normal value – 5L/min

Cardiac Output

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Cardiac Index

◦ Volume of blood pumped by the heart per minute divided by body surface area

CI = CO BSANormal range: 2.5 - 4.0 L/min per square meter

Low values can indicate cardiogenic shock

Cardiac Output

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Amount of blood ejected from the ventricle with each ventricular systole

End-systolic volume (ESV)

◦ Volume remaining after systole

Stroke Volume

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End-diastolic volume (EDV)

◦ Volume to which the ventricles fill during diastole

SV = EDV – ESV

Normal value: 60 – 130 ml/beat

Stroke Volume

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Ejection fraction (EF)

◦ Proportion of EDV ejected on each stroke

EF = SV EDV

◦ Normal value – 64%

Stroke Volume

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Preload

◦ Initial stretch of the ventricle

◦ The greater the preload, the greater the tension on contraction

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Afterload

◦ Force against which the heart must pump.

◦ In clinical practice, left ventricular afterload equals systemic vascular resistance.

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Contractility

◦ Amount of systolic force exerted by heart muscle at any given preload.

◦ Increases in contractility leads to higher EF, lower end systolic volume, and higher stroke volume

◦ Decreases in contractility lead to lower ejection fraction, higher end systolic volume, and decreased stroke volume.

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Contractility Inotropism: any factor which affects the

contractility of the heart◦ Positive inotropism

Higher stroke volumes for a given preload: indicating an increase in contractility

◦ Negative inotropism Decreased stroke volumes for a given preload;

indicates a decrease in contractility

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Heart rate

Autonomic nervous system

oSympathetic: fight or flight: HR, RR, BP, pupil dilation and bronchodilation

o Parasympathetic: rest and digest

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Heart Rate◦ Cardiac output directly proportional to heart

rate Relationship exists up to 160 to 180

beats/min Filling time for ventricles insufficient at

higher rates

Factors Affecting Stroke Volume

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Sum of all frictional forces opposing blood flow through the vascular circulation.

SVR = Mean Aortic Pressure-Right Atrial Pressure Cardiac Output

◦ Mean Aortic Pressure - use systolic pressure (normal mean = 90mmhg)

◦ Right Atrial Pressure - use central venous pressure (normal mean = 4mmhg)

◦ Cardiac Output normal mean = 5L/min.

Normal value: 15 – 20 mmHg/L/min

The Vascular System-Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR)

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Cardiac anatomy◦ Layers of the heart◦ Chambers of the heart◦ Valves◦ Coronary arteries

Blood flow through the heart Arterial system

◦ Structure of artery◦ Purpose◦ Major arteries

Key Points

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Venous system◦ Structure of system◦ Purpose◦ Aids to venous flow

Capillary system◦ Structure of system◦ Purpose

Key Points

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Composition of blood Plasma proteins Types of cells, functions, normal values,

abnormalities◦ Erythrocytes◦ Leukocytes◦ Megakaryocytes◦ Platelets◦ Hemoglobin◦ Hematocrit

Key Points

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Definition, normal values, and formula (if applicable)◦ Systemic vascular resistance◦ Systolic pressure◦ Diastolic pressure◦ Mean arterial pressure◦ Cardiac output and index◦ Stroke volume, esv, edv, efFactors affecting stroke volume

Key Points