Cardiac Contractility and Events of the Cardiac Cycle Flashcards
What causes L-type dihydropyridine channels to open?
The action potential
depolarisation (?)
What happens when L-type dihydropyridine channels open?
– Large influx of [Ca2+]e
• only ~10% contributes to contraction
– Cardiac muscle T-tubules 5x greater in diameter than sk. muscle (25x more volume)
– Cardiac T-tubule mucopolysaccharides sequester Ca2+
DHP activation causes release of Ca2+ from sarcoplasmic reticulum via ryanodine release channels
At resting heart rates, ↑[Ca2+]i due to influx and sarcoplasmic release is insufficient to cause maximal contractile force.
Describe the path of Ca++ in cardiac contraction
Ca++ will pass into the myocyte via T tubules (greater diameter than in skeletal muscle so great amount of calcium sequestered there via mucopolysaccharides).
This influx of calcium via L-type dihydropyridine channels will cause release of Ca++ from sarcoplasmic reticulum, which will then pass onto troponin C to form cross links between heads of actin/myosin to cause contraction.
(calcium induced calcium release (CICR))
Ca++ released in relaxation will then pass into sarcoplasmic reticulum via Ca-ATPase pumps on the SR membrane. The rest will be passed out via Ca-ATPase pumps and Na+/Ca++ cotransporters on the sarcolemma
How do you impact contractility of the heart?
Sympathetic nervous system having positive inotropic effect via noradrenaline on Beta1 receptors
What + where is the effect of the parasympathetic innervation on heart contractility?
– Mostly to SA node
– Innervates atria
– Main effect is ↓rate
– Indirect –ve inotropic effect
Describe in detail the impact of the sympathetic nervous system on contractility of the heart (and where this is)
Sympathetic innervation
– Throughout entire heart
– Positive inotropic effect
Noradrenaline on β1 receptors – ↑[cAMP]i – Enhances Ca2+ influx – Promotes storage and release of Ca2+ from sarcoplasmic stores – therefore ↑contractility – therefore ↑speed of relaxation
What is preload?
The volume of blood in the ventricles prior to contraction
Discuss the refractory period of the heart
Cardiac twitches involve all fibers of the myocardium
Can not significantly summate contractions of cardiac muscle
Refractory period due to inactivation of Na+ channels
Skeletal muscle
– Absolute refractory period 1-2ms
– Period of contraction 20-100ms
Cardiac muscle
– Absolute refractory period (ARP) ~245ms
– Relative refractory period (RRP)
– Period of supranormal excitability (SNP)
– Period of contraction 250ms
Describe each stage of the cardiac cycle
Atrial systole Isovolumetric contraction Ejection Isovolumetric relaxation Rapid inflow Diastasis
Discuss the atria as primer pumps
– ~80% of ventricular filling is passive due to normal blood flow
– Atrial contraction ‘tops up’ remaining ~20% volume
Discuss the ventricles as pumps
– Isovolumic (isometric) period of contraction
– Period of rapid ejection (1/3) when 70% of stroke volume
ejected
– Period of slow ejection (2/3) when remaining 30% ejected
– Isovolumic (isometric) period of relaxation
Discuss blood pressure in the arteries of the systemic circulation
Blood pressure in the arteries oscillates
Systolic blood pressure in the aorta
– ~120 mmHg
Diastolic blood pressure in the aorta
– ~80 mmHg
Discuss blood pressure in the arteries of the pulmonary circulation
Pressure in pulmonary circulation is much lower
– Much less resistance to flow
– Right side of heart needs to do less work
– Right ventricle walls contain less muscle mass
Pulmonary systolic pressure
– ~30 mmHg
Pulmonary diastolic pressure
– ~12 mmHg
What is ESV?
End systolic volume (ESV)
Volume in ventricle at the end of systole
What is EDV?
End diastolic volume (EDV)
Volume in ventricle at the end of diastole