CV Flashcards

1
Q

components of blood

A

55%-plasma (fluid, 90% water), transports co2
45%-cells (solid), rbc-lose nucleus to carry more hemoglobin
1% of blood volume- wbc

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2
Q

structure and function of different types of blood cells

A

rbc: biconcave disk without nucleus when entering blood stream maximize SA for diffusion and let the rbc more flexible to move in narrow blood streams, function: their hemoglobin protein has a high affinity for o2 which lets them carry o2 throughout the body
1 hemo=4 o2 molecules

wbc: fight off infections and protect the body from pathogens, leukocytes can pass through capillaries (making them more effective) and contains a nucleus in order to use proteins to fight off infection, larger in size to eat (macrophage) and destroy pathogens

thrombocytes: help the body clot blood, contain proteins on their surface that let them stick to breaks in blood vessel walls and have granules that secrete proteins that help with blood clotting

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3
Q

is blood a fluid

A

no, it contains solid parts- its a tissue

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4
Q

what are the blood types?
universal donor?
universal receiver?
what is the protein that determines +/-

A

blood types: A, AB, B, O +/-
ud: O-
ur: AB+
Rh factor

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5
Q

arteries

A
  • carry blood away from heart
  • have more smooth muscle and elastic tissue = thicker walls
    this allows arteries to dilate as blood passes through them and helps with high pressure
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6
Q

veins

A
  • carry blood towards heart (against gravity, allowed with movement and valves)
  • Thin, less elastic walls help them handle high volumes and low pressure.
  • have valves to prevent backward blood flow
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7
Q

arterioles

A
  • tubes with thick walls of muscle that can adjust the amount of space they have inside.
  • helps control the amount of blood they let through by increasing or decreasing their diameter
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8
Q

venules

A
  • the smallest veins and receive blood from capillaries
  • thin (lacks a lot of muscle or elastic tissue), prone to rupture with excessive volume
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9
Q

capillaries

A
  • Capillaries have very thin walls that are only 1 cell thick. These walls are also very permeable (leaky!!).

-This allows the carbon dioxide, oxygen and nutrients to diffuse between cells and vessels.

  • They carry blood at a very low pressure so don’t need any muscular walls.
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10
Q

structure of the heart and function

A

The Heart: a muscular organ that continuously pumps blood through the body, generating blood flow.
Contains cardiac muscle to never tire it, contain 4 chambers, 4 one-way valves, and sets of arteries and veins to help generate blood flow

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11
Q

heart conduction

A
  • lub-dub sound is caused by ventricles contracting
  • sinoatrial node; stimulates the muscle cells to contract and relax rhythmically, also called a pacemaker (sets pace for cardiac activity), located in right atrium wall
    the SA node generates and electrical signal forcing the two atria to contract together, and the signal reaches the AV node
  • The AV node transmits the electrical signal through specialized fibres (purkinje fibres) that run down and around the septum and ventricles

initiates the simultaneous contraction of all cells including the right and left ventricles

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12
Q

types of circulation

A

systemic- the movement of blood from the heart through the body

pulmonary- the movement of blood from the heart to the lungs

cardiac- blood flow within the heart

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13
Q

blood pressure and device

A

blood pressure measures the pressure inside your artery walls when your heart contracts (systolic) and relaxes (diastolic), it is measured with a sphygmomanometer

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14
Q

cardiac technologies

A

ECG- checks electrical signals of the heart as it pumps and generates an image

autoclave- sterilizer

catheters- implants fake valve

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15
Q

cardiac diseases

A

myocardial infarction: heart attack= blocked artery

arrythmia: irregular rhythms of the heart

coronary artery disease- too much plaque

Cardiomyopathy- heart is not working efficiently

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16
Q

blood flow in (O2 sat)

A

In from body to the right atrium, to right ventricle, pushed into pulmonary arteries THEN
Pulmonary veins bring o2 rich blood back via left atrium, which flows to left ventricle, which pumps o2 rich blood through body via aorta

17
Q

blood flow out (O2 poor)

A

Vena Cava brings O2 poor blood to Right Atrium which flows to Ventricle which pumps the o2 poor blood to the lungs via pulmonary arteries

18
Q

which are receiving chambers

A

atria

19
Q

which are pumping chambers

A

ventricles

20
Q

what is the diameter of blood vessels regulated by?

A

medulla oblongata

21
Q

what is artierolar resistance

A

diameter of the Arteriole determines the amount of blood flow, increased diameter, means decreased bp

AFFECTS BP

22
Q

what is cardiac output

A

amount of blood pumped from the heart per minute
= HR(SV), increased cardiac output, increased bp, increased hr

AFFECTS BP

23
Q

What is stroke volume

A

volume of blood leaving the heart

24
Q

left subclavian artery

A

move oxygen-rich blood from your heart to your upper body

25
Q

coronary artery

A

sends blood to the left/right side of the heart muscle, right one supplies blood to the AV node

26
Q

brachiocephalic trunk/artery

A

supplies blood to the head, neck and upper extremities.

27
Q

types of capillaries

A

continuous (most common)-transport blood and o2, no fenestrations, but still permeable

fenestrated- have tiny openings or pores where larger molecules and proteins can move to organs and glands, in kidneys for example

sinusoidal- larger openings allowing for greater movement of particles and fluid throughout, occurs in liver and bone marrow for example

28
Q

exception to artery and veins

A

pulmonary arteries carry o2-poor blood instead of o2 rich blood to lungs,
pulmonary veins carry o2 rich blood to heart instead of o2 poor blood to heart (from lungs)