Cardiovascular Histology Flashcards

1
Q

What are the three layers of the heart?

A

Epicardium, myocardium, endocardium

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2
Q

What does the epicardium look like histologically?

A

Simple squamous epithelium at its surface and subepicardial connective tissue with blood vessels, fat and nervous tissue within it. Stains purple. Thin relative to myocardium.

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3
Q

What does the myocardium look like histologically?

A

Cardiac muscle with an abundant blood supply. Not very organised, lots of spaces in between. Stains pink

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4
Q

What does the endocardium look like histologically?

A

An endothelial layer, subendothelial connective tissue, conducting tissue. Thin relative to myocardium and epicardium. Homogenous. Stains purple.

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5
Q

What do cardiac muscle cells look like histologically?

A

Small elongated cells, striated, central nuclei, joined by intercalated discs

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6
Q

What is the function of the intercalated disc?

A

anchors actin filaments in one cell’s sarcomere to sarcomere in another cell via fascia adherents

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7
Q

What is the function of gap junctions?

A

Allows neighbouring cells to coordinate their beating

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8
Q

What determines how fast the heart beats?

A

The heat beats at the rate of the fast beating cardiac muscle cells

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9
Q

What makes up the conducting system of the heart?

A

SA node, AV node, bundle of his, purkinje fibres

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10
Q

Where are purkinje fibres found?

A

In the endocardium against the inner wall of the heart

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11
Q

How are purkinje fibres different from other cardiac muscle cells?

A

They are larger, have limited contractile machinery and are full of glycogen

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12
Q

What are the three layers of a blood vessel?

A

Tunica intima, tunica media, tunica adventitia

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13
Q

What is the structure of the intima?

A

Simple squamous epithelium on basal lamina and a thin layer of subendothelial connective tissue. The endothelial cells are elongated in the direction of blood flow.

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14
Q

What is the role of the intima?

A

Secrete anti-clotting factors on the inner surface and pro clotting factors on the outer surface, and also release substances to signal to the media to contract

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15
Q

What is the structure of the media?

A

Smooth muscle that is arranged concentrically

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16
Q

What is special about the media?

A

The cells behave like fibroblasts and secrete this own extracellular matrix of collagen type III, elastin and ground substance - this may contribute to atherosclerosis

17
Q

What is the structure of the adventitia?

A

Mostly connective tissue (collagen type I, elastin and ground substance) with embedded fibroblasts, anchors to surrounding tissue, has own blood supply (vaso vasorum)

18
Q

What are the three types of arteries?

A

Elastic arteries, muscular arteries, arterioles

19
Q

Where are elastic arteries located?

A

The vessels closest to the heart

20
Q

What is the structure of elastic arteries?

A

Contains lots of layers of elastin in the media

21
Q

What regulates blood flow into capillaries?

A

precapillary sphincters - the final smooth muscle of the arteriole

22
Q

What is the structure of capillaries?

A

A single endothelial cell rolled into a tube and joined end to end, no smooth muscle, basal lamina as a barrier to diffusion, sometimes associated with a pericyte and surrounded by only a few collagen fibres

23
Q

Where to white blood cells exit the vasculature?

A

Venules

24
Q

What is the structure of veins?

A

Thicker adventitia to withstand hydrostatic pressure, valves, more connective tissue in subendothelial space, sometimes longitudinal smith muscle

25
Q

What is the structure of lymphatics?

A

Similar to veins