Cardiac Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

what is longer, Cardiac muscle action potential or skeletal muscle action potential/

A

cardiac muscle action potential

  • Expand time necessary to develop force for the entire heart to contract
  • Also includes Ca++ involvement in the process
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2
Q

Systole

A

period of ventricular contraction (pumping)

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3
Q

Diastole

A

period of ventricular relaxation (filling)

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4
Q

what are the 5 stages of the cardiac cycle?

A
  1. atriole systole begins: atrial contraction forces blood into ventricles
  2. ventricular systole (1st phase): ventricular contraction pushes AV valves closed
  3. Ventricular systole (2nd phase): semilunar valves open and blood is ejected
  4. ventricular diastole (early): semilunar valves close and blood flows into atria
  5. ventricular diastole (late): chambers relax and blood fills ventricles passively
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5
Q

Electrocardiogram

A

ECG: process of recording the electrical activity of the heart over a period of time

detects:
1. Irregular or abnormal heartbeats due to problems in the conduction system
2. Identify where in the heart muscle damage has occurred

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6
Q

Einthoven’s triangle

A

P-wave: atrial depolarization
QRS complex: ventricular depolarization
T wave: ventricular repolarization

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7
Q

Normal cardiac action potential is conducted through

A

the atria and ventricles, a characteristic sequence of voltage differences is created between the left forelimb and the right forelimb

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8
Q

PR interval

A
  • atrial depolarization
  • The cardiac action potential is being conducted through the AV node
  • Time between depolarizations. PP interval can be used to measure atrial contractions per minute
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9
Q

RR interval

A

Time between ventricular depolarization. Used to measure ventricular contractions per minute

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10
Q

QT interval

A

ventricular action potential

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11
Q

Cardiac arrhythmias

A

caused by lack of the FORMATION of action potentials (sick sinus syndrome) or the conduction of action potentials (AV blocks)`

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12
Q

what are 2 cardiac arrhythmias?

A
  1. Bradycardia = slow heartbeat
  2. Tachycardia = fast heartbeat
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13
Q

what movements does action potentials make in the heart?

A

circular movement due to damage or blockage of the tissue. Can happen in both the atria and ventricles, can lead to fibrillation in with parts

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14
Q

Defibrillators

A

stimulates the entire heart to go into the refractory period

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15
Q

Tachycardia

A
  • heart “palpitations”, dizziness, fainting or near-fainting, lightheadedness
  • Can lead to ventricular or atrial fibrillations (irregular or fast HR)
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16
Q

Bradycardia

A
  • fatigue, dizziness, lightheadedness, fainting or near-fainting spells
  • Blood can pool in chambers and potentially start to clot
  • Most pacemakers implanted are for too slow of a heartbeat
17
Q

Parasympathetic acetylcholine

A
  • binds to muscarinic receptors on the heart muscle
  • Activation of the muscarinic receptor causes opening of additional K+ channels, making the cell “hyperpolarize” taking longer to reach threshold
18
Q

Sympathetic norepinephrine

A
  • binds to beta receptors
  • Increases Ca++ channels and their permeability, decreasing the time it takes to reach threshold
19
Q

Mechanical properties of the heart

A

Heart rate
Stroke volume
Cardiac output (CO)
Ejection fraction
Preload
Afterload
Contractility
Frank-starling mechanism
Factors on cardiac output

20
Q

Adrenergic neurons

A

release norepinephrine (NE), sympathetic neuron

21
Q

Adrenergic receptors

A
  • alpha and beta receptors are on visceral effectors

Alpha 1 and beta 1 are excitatory
Alpha 2 and beta 2 are inhibitory
Beta 3 is on brown adipose tissue and involved in thermogenesis

22
Q

Cholinergic neurons

A
  • release acetylcholine (Ach)
  • All sympathetic and parasympathetic preganglionic neurons, all parasympathetic postganglionic neurons
23
Q

Cholinergic receptors

A

Nicotinic receptors are present in postganglionic neurons and motor endplate

Muscarinic receptors are present in membrane of all effectors (smooth, cardiac muscles, and glands)

24
Q

Which of the following statements is true?

The period of contraction (systole), the heart pumps out blood through the arteries; during the period of relaxation (diastole), the heart fills with blood

The period of contraction (diastole), the heart pumps blood out through the arteries; during the period of relation (systole), the heart fills with blood

A

The period of contraction (systole), the heart pumps out blood through the arteries; during the period of relaxation (diastole), the heart fills with blood

25
Q

During the early repolarization phase of cardiac muscles which of the following ion channels open and close?

K+ channels open and Na+ channels closed

Na+ channels open and K+ channels closed

A

K+ channels open and Na+ channels closed

26
Q

Ventricular depolarization occurs during

P wave
QRS complex
T wave

A

QRS complex

27
Q

Activation of the SV (sinoatrial) node would result in the:

P wave
QRS complex
T wave

A

P wave

28
Q

Ventricular repolarization occurs during:

P wave
QRS complex
T wave

A

T wave

29
Q

Atrial contraction occurs:

P wave
QRS complex
T wave

A

P wave

30
Q

Memorize the ECG chart!

A

Memorize the ECG chart