Introduction to Cardiac Pathology Flashcards

1
Q

Describe cardiac muscle

A

branching, striated fibers; organized into parallel units (sarcomeres); sarcolemma arranged to deliver calcium for rapid conduction; intercalated discs; central nuclei; main fuel is fatty acids

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2
Q

Where do coronary arteries run

A

run in connective tissue on surface of heart, supply blood from outer to inner layers of myocardium; originate in coronary ostia behind aortic valve

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3
Q

Most of the coronary blood flow occurs during

A

diastole

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4
Q

LAD supplies

A

apex of heart, anterior left ventricle, anterior two thirds of ventricular septum

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5
Q

Right coronary artery supplies

A

entire right ventricular free wall, posterior third of ventricular septum; posterior left ventricle

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6
Q

Left circumflex supplies

A

lateral left ventricular wall; in 1/5 people, also supplies posterior aspect of left ventricle

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7
Q

Results in damage to the left ventricular wall and ventricular septum

A

occlusions to either the right or left coronary arteries

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8
Q

Part of the endocardium at greatest risk of ischemia

A

subendocardial region

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9
Q

Describe the heart’s conduction system

A

specialized myofibers; myocytes have a certain automaticity; without impulse conduction, will either fire aberrantly or contract in an unorganized fashion

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10
Q

SA node

A

located at the junction of the SVC and right atrium; serves as the pacemaker

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11
Q

AV node

A

near the atrium-ventricular junction; organizes and fires impulse into the bundle of his

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12
Q

Bundle of His

A

runs thru ventricular septum to insure coordinated contraction of both ventricles, movement of contraction in a wave of depolarization to maximize pumping action

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13
Q

Pericardial sac

A

potential space, usually holds 50-60 ml of serous fluid

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14
Q

Pericardial sac is lined by

A

lined on both sides with mesothelial layers of the serous pericardium

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15
Q

Visceral layer/epicardium

A

reflection of the pericardium which covers the surface

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16
Q

heart and serous pericardium are encased in what

A

several layers of the fibrous pericardium

17
Q

Chamber function

A

left/right synchronous; dependent on directional wave of depolarizaton; sequential upper chamber to lower chamber contraction to help in directional flow

18
Q

Valvular function

A

essentially one-directional flow valves to prevent backflow; essential for maintaining stroke volume and attaining chamber pressure; passive action

19
Q

Primary causes of cardiovascular dysfunction

A

hypovolemia; arrhythmia; pressure overload; volume overload; cardiac muscle failure

20
Q

pressure overload caused by

A

hypertension, valvular stenosis

21
Q

volume overload caused by

A

fluid overload, valvular insufficiency

22
Q

Cardiac muscle failure caused by

A

ischemia, metabolic, cardiomyopathy

23
Q

myocardium response to increased work demands

A

pressure overload -> concentric hypertrophy

volume overload -> eccentric hypertrophy

24
Q

Microscopic changes in hypertrophied myocytes

A

cellular and nuclear enlargement; increased myocyte size and myofibril content; some disorganization of sarcomeres; expression of fetal proteins

25
Q

Hypertrophy leads to

A

enlargement/dilation and eventual heart failure; increased myocardial demands for oxygen

26
Q

Mechanisms involved in cardiac decompensation

A

Starling law; inadequate oxygenation; fibrosis; loss of myocytes; abnormal calcium homeostasis; adrenergic densesitization; amyloidosis

27
Q

Symptoms and signs of left sided heart failure

A

cardiac enlargement; left atrium enlargement; pulmonary congestion; hypoxic encephalopathy; coronary insufficiency and cardiac ischemia

28
Q

Symptoms and signs of right sided heart failure

A

engorgement of systemic and portal vasculature; hypoxia; liver congestion; kidney congestion; splenic congestion; dependent peripheral edema

29
Q

Nutmeg liver

A

right sided heart failure; chronic passive congestion; centrilobular necrosis leading to cardiac sclerosis;local hemorrhage; phagocytosis of red cells

30
Q

Etiology of global heart failure

A

long-standing right or left-sided failure; constrictive disease; massive infarct; shock

31
Q

Signs and symptoms of global heart failure

A

degree of symptomology depends on the rapidity of development of cardiac failure

32
Q

Causes of Cor pulmonale

A

pulmonary hypertension secondary to primary disease of the lungs or pulmonary vasculature; acute: pulmonary embolism; chronic: COPD, compression/obliteration of pulmonary arteries; fibrosis of lungs

33
Q

Criteria for hypertensive heart disease

A
  1. left ventricular hypertrophy (usually concentric) in the absence of other cardiac pathology
  2. history of hypertension
34
Q

Microscopic features of myocyte hypertrophy

A

increased myocyte size with prominent and sometimes reduplicated nuclei; decreased capillary density; increased deposition of ECM

35
Q

Microscopic features of myocardial atrophy/apoptosis

A

decreased cell numbers; increased fibrosis

36
Q

Microscopic features of cardiac necrosis/inflammation

A

coagulative necrosis with evolving inflammatory infiltrate; eventual replacement by fibrosis and scar

37
Q

Microscopic features of reperfusion injury

A

contraction bands

38
Q

Microscopic features of cardiac aging

A

fewer myocytes; increased collagen; amyloid; basophilic degeneration; brown atrophy (lipofuschin)

39
Q

Microscopic features of acute of chronic inflammatory response to infection of the heart

A

depends on the nature of the infectious agent; variable infiltration of inflammatory cells and myocyte damage