2. Intro to cardiovascular system Flashcards

1
Q

What is the spleen?

A

Large flat oval organ located below the diaphragm - main function is to store blood and filter it

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2
Q

What is different about the equine and canine spleen?

A

Can release red blood cells from the spleen during exercise in order to have a greater oxygen carrying capacity of the blood

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3
Q

What are some functions of the CVS?

A
  1. Transport of O2 and substrates to cells
  2. Transport of CO2 and metabolites from cells
  3. Distribution of hormones - e.g., epinephrine (catecholamine)
  4. Defence
  5. Haemostasis - leads to cessation of bleeding (platelets)
  6. Thermoregulation
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4
Q

What is contraction of the heart controlled by?

A

Intrinsic pacemaker and autonomic nervous stimulation

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5
Q

What is the function of arteries?

A

Distribution channels

  • carry blood away from the heart
  • muscular elastic walls; terminate in capillary beds
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6
Q

What is the function of veins?

A

Blood reservoirs

  • carry blood back to the heart
  • less muscular than arteries but very elastic walls
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7
Q

What is microcirculation?

A

Where exchange with tissues occurs; capillaries very thin walls (endothelial cells only); site of exchange of gases and nutrients

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8
Q

Describe the mammalian circulatory system

A

Double circulatory

Fully developed septum that separates the atria and ventricles

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9
Q

Describe the aquatic circulatory system

A

Single circulatory circuit

Single atrium and single ventricle

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10
Q

Describe the amphibian circulatory system

A

Double circulatory system

2 atria and a single ventricle

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11
Q

Describe dual circulation

A

Pulmonary circulation = to and from the lungs

Systemic circulation = to and from the body

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12
Q

Describe the pressures in the systemic and pulmonary circulations

A

Left side of the heart pumps oxygenated blood to systemic circulation at high pressure
Right side of the heart pumps deoxygenated blood to the pulmonary circulation (shorter distance = lower pressure)

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13
Q

What are systolic and diastolic pressures?

A
Systolic = contraction pressure 
Diastolic = relaxation pressure
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14
Q

What are the pressures of blood in the major arteries/veins?

A

Vena Cava = deoxygenated @ 3 mmHg
Aorta = oxygenated, systemic, to rest of body @ 100 mmHg
Pulmonary artery = deoxygenated, pulmonary circulation @ 12 mmHg
Pulmonary vein = oxygenated @ 7 mmHg

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15
Q

What are tricuspid valves?

A

3 leaflets on the right side of the heart

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16
Q

What are mitral valves?

A

2 leaflets on the left side of the heart

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17
Q

What are the AV valves

A

Atrioventricular valves

  • tricuspid
  • mitral
18
Q

What are the semi-lunar valves?

A
Aortic = 3 cusps 
Pulmonary = 3 cusps
19
Q

How do the AV valves work?

A

Left and right AV valves separate atria from ventricles and are therefore inlet valves to the ventricles

20
Q

How is evasion of the cusps prevented?

A

Action of papillary muscles through the chordae tendinae

21
Q

How do the SL valves work?

A

Outlet valves of the ventricles

  • both have three cusps
  • aortic and pulmonary valves prevent backflow at the end of systole into the left and right ventricles, respectively
22
Q

Between which ribs can you listen to the valves?

A

3-6
3-4 = P
4-5 = A
5-6 = L A-V

23
Q

What are the functions of the cardiac skeleton?

A
  1. Helps to provide structural integrity to the heart (fibrous tissue)
  2. Breaks up continuity between cardiac muscle cells of the atria and those of the ventricle
24
Q

What are the coronary arteries?

A

First branch off the aorta

  • 5% of the cardiac output is delivered directly into the myocardium
  • extensive capillarisation
25
Q

Describe the development of a mammalian foetuses heart

A
  1. Foramen ovale connecting the atria (becomes fossa ovalis)

2. Ductus arteriosus - vessel between the pulmonary trunk and the aorta becomes the ligamentum arteriosum

26
Q

Describe the function of elastic vessels

A

Large arteries

  • accomodate stroke volume (high elastance)
  • convert intermittent ejection (stop-go-flow) into continuous flow
27
Q

Describe the function of conduit and feed vessels

A

Medium to small arteries

- conduct blood flow to organs

28
Q

Describe the function of resistance vessels

A

Arterioles, terminal arteries

  • Control arterial blood pressure
  • Control local blood flow
29
Q

Describe the function of exchange vessels

A

Capillaries

  • nutrient delivery to cells
  • lymph formation
  • removal of metabolic waste
30
Q

Describe the function of capacitance vessels

A

Venules, veins

  • control cardiac filling pressure
  • reservoir of blood
31
Q

Describe the structure of a artery

A

Round with a thick wall

  • tunica intima, rippled, with internal elastic membrane
  • tunica media, thick, dominated by smooth muscle cells & elastic fibres, with external elastic membrane present
  • tunica externa (adventita), collagen and elastic fibre; nerves terminals; vasa vasorum
32
Q

Describe the structure of a vein

A

Flattened/collapsed with a thin wall

  • tunica intima, smooth with no interal elastic membrane present
  • tunica media, thin, dominated by smooth muscle cells & collagen fibres, no external elastic membrane
  • tunica externa, collagen and elastic fibres; smooth muscle cells; nerve terminals
33
Q

Define flow (velocity)

A

Amount of blood flowing through a vessel at any given time (ml/min)

34
Q

Define perfusion

A

flow per unit mass of tissue

35
Q

What is the relationship between resistance and radius of lumen?

A

Inversely proportional to the 4th power of the radius

- small vessels = ↑ resistance

36
Q

What is the significance of the body being able to change the size of its lumen?

A

If body changes size of lumen then it can regulate the overall resistance of the circulation
- how blood pressure is regulated

37
Q

Describe the relationship between blood flow (F) and blood pressure ΔP

A

Directly proportional

- if ΔP increases blood flow speeds up

38
Q

Describe the relationship between blood flow F and peripheral resistance R

A

Inversely proportional
- if R increases then blood flow decreases
F = ΔP/R

39
Q

What are the forces that move fluid across the capillary wall?

A
  • oncotic pressure = pressure exerted by proteins

- hydrostatic pressure = pressure exerted by blood

40
Q

What are the Starling forces dependant on?

A

Four variables that control the movement of fluid

41
Q

What is the lymphatic system?

A

Lymphatic vessels carry interstitial fluid to the cardiovascular system

42
Q

What is oedema?

A

Abnormal accumulation of interstitial fluid

  • excess filtration
  • defective reabsorption
  • defective lymphatic drainage