The Heart as a Pump Flashcards

1
Q

How does pulmonary arterial pressure differ from systemic pressure?

A

It’s lower as TVR in pulmonary vascular bed is much lower –> less pressure needed from R side to push same CO through pulmonary circuit

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2
Q

Why is it important that both pulmonary and systemic circuits have the same cardiac output?

A

Blood would gradually accumulate in one side of heart

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3
Q

How is blood flow calculated?

A

Flow = pressure/resistance (for both circuits separately)

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4
Q

What is the tricuspid valve?

A

Right AV valve

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5
Q

What is the bicuspid/mitral valve?

A

Left AV valve

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6
Q

What is the pulmonary valve?

A

Semilunar valve between right ventricle and pulmonary artery

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7
Q

What is the aortic valve?

A

Semilunar valve between the left ventricle and the aorta

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8
Q

What is the role of papillary muscles?

A

First to contract in ventricular systole to pull chordae tendinae to close valves

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9
Q

What are ‘chordae tendinae’?

A

Fibrous tendons which attach to valves to keep them in position (also attached to papillary muscles)

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10
Q

Describe the valve sequence of the left side of the heart in a normal cardiac cycle

A

Start of systole - left ventricle starts to contract so mitral/bicuspid valve closes
During systole - pressure increase causes aortic valve to open
End of systole - aortic valve closes
Pressure near zero - mitral valve reopens

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11
Q

How are ventricles usually filled?

A

As a result of the elastic recoil of ventricular wall during diastole

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12
Q

What causes heart sounds?

A

Turbulent blood flow either due to normal valve closure or pathology of valves

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13
Q

Describe the ‘lubb’/S1 heart sound

A

Due to closure of AV valves followed by opening of semilunar valves

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14
Q

Describe the ‘dupp’/S2 heart sound

A

Closure of semilunar valves followed by opening of AV valves

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15
Q

Describe the S3 heart sound

A

Faint, low-pitched sound and can be indicative of serious heart damage in adults, but is relatively common in children and young adults

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16
Q

Where would you auscultate the aortic semilunar valve?

A

Left of sternum at 2nd intercostal space

17
Q

Where would you auscultate the pulmonary semilunar valve?

A

Right of sternum at 2nd intercostal space

18
Q

Where would you auscultate the bicuspid/mitral valve?

A

Mid-axillary line of the 5th intercostal space

19
Q

Where would you auscultate the tricuspid valve?

A

Just to right of sternum at bottom of 5th intercostal space

20
Q

State Starling’s law

A

Ventricular contractile force increase with increased end diastolic volume

21
Q

Explain Starling’s law

A

Increase in preload (blood delivered to ventricles) causes greater dilation of ventricular walls (due to greater EDV) and therefore greater recoil –> greater force of contraction –> greater SV –> greater CO

22
Q

When does Starling’s law fail?

A

If ventricle expands beyond certain volume the ventricles become overstretched and weaken (heart failure)

23
Q

Define ‘preload’

A

Degree of stretching of ventricle during diastole

24
Q

Define ‘afterload’

A

The effective flow impedence/resistance of the aorta and large arteries

25
Q

What mediated venous return to the heart?

A

One-way valves, muscular pumps (contraction of muscle –> propels blood), thoraco-abdominal pump

26
Q

What causes JVP?

A

When right atrium contracts, backpressure occurs (due to absence of valves) in the jugular vein which can be felt as feint pulse

27
Q

What is preload proportional to?

A

End diastolic volume

28
Q

What is the consequence of a large afterload?

A

Causes longer period of ventricular systole before semilunar valves open, and shorter ejection duration –> smaller SV and larger residual volume

29
Q

What is the thoraco-abdominal pump?

A

In inspiration; thoracic cavity pressure reduces –> pulls blood into IVC
Expiration; thoracic pressure increases and blood is forced into right atrium