Cardiovasular Lecture (Exam 3) Flashcards

1
Q

Nitric Oxide (NO)

A

cellular signaling molecule involved in many physiological processes, including dilation or arterioles
-1 of 3 endothelium-derived vasodilators blood flow regulators at rest and during exercise

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2
Q

Cardiovascular Drift

A

an increase in heart rate during exercise to compensate for a decrease in stroke volume. This compensation helps maintain a constant cardia output
-decrease in SV and a parallel increase in HR

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3
Q

Endothelium

A

innermost layer of the intima

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4
Q

For cardiovascular drift, when SV decreases:

A

skin blood flow increases
plasma volume decreases (sweating)
venous return/preload

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5
Q

Maximal Heart Rate (HRmax)

A

the highest heart rate value attainable during an all-out effort to the point of exhaustion

  • 1 beat per year decreases
  • estimated HRmax = 208 - (0.7 x age in years)
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6
Q

Normal RHR

A
  • the heart rate at rest, averaging 60 to 80 beats/min
  • Trained RHR: as low as 30 to 40 beats/min
  • Due to an increase in vagal tone for PSNS
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7
Q

Steady-State HR

A

the optimal heart rate for meeting circulatory demands at a submaximal intensity

  • point of plateau
  • if intensity increases, so does steady-state HR
  • adjustment to new intensity takes 2 to 3 minutes
  • is the basis for simple exercise tests hat estimate aerobic fitness and HRmax
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8
Q

Systolic blood pressure (SBP)

A

highest arterial blood pressure, resulting from ventricular systole

  • top number : 110/*
  • ~110 - 120 mmHg
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9
Q

Ventricular Systole

A

contraction of the heart muscles

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10
Q

SBP normal response to exercise

A

increase in SBP is proportional to exercise intensity

  • 120 mmHg at rest
  • > 200 mmHg in trained individuals
  • 240-250 mmHg in highly trained individuals
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11
Q

Diastolic blood Pressure (DBP)

A

lowest arterial pressure, resulting from ventricular diastole
-bottom number: */70
~70 - 80 mmHg

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12
Q

Ventricular Diastole

A

resting phase of the heart

-heart refills with blood

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13
Q

DBP normal response to exercise

A

slight decrease or slight increase at max exercise

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14
Q

Sympathetic Nervous System relationship to the heart

A

-increases HR and force contraction because of stress by releasing of norepinephrine (neurotransmitter)
-carries impulses to SV, AV nodes to increase:
rate of depolarization of SA node
conduction speed
-Increases HR above intrinsic HR
determines HR during physical activity and emotional stress
max HR: 250 bpm

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15
Q

Parasympathetic Nervous System relationship to the heart

A

-reaches heart through the vagus nerve (vagal tone)
-decrease HR and force of contraction by release acetylcholine
-can slow it as low as 20-30 bpm
-carries impulses to SV, AV nodes to:
cause hyperpolarization of cells, resulting in slower depolarization and decreased HR and contraction
-Decreases HR below intrinsic HR
intrinsic HR: 100 bpm
normal RHR: 60-100 bpm
elite endurance athletes: 35 bpm

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16
Q

Stroke Volume

A
volume of blood pumped in 1 heartbeat
-most blood ejected during systole
-end-diastolic volume
-end-systolic volume
SV(mL/bpm) = EDV - ESV
17
Q

End Diastolic Volume (EDV)

A

volume of blood in ventricle before contraction

18
Q

End Systolic Volume (ESV)

A

volume of blood in ventricle after contraction

19
Q

Ejection Fraction

A

proportion of blood pumped out of the left ventricle each beat
Total Volume of Blood per min: EF (%) = SV / EDV

20
Q

Contractility

A

the strength and vigor of the heart’s contraction during systole

21
Q

Cardiac Output

A

the volume of blood pumped out by the heart per minute
Q• = HR x SV
-increases with increased intensity

22
Q

Normal Values for Cardiac Output

A

resting: Q ~5 L/min
untrained: Qmax ~20 L/min
trained: Qmax 40 L/min

23
Q

Resting a-vO2diff value

A

~6 mL O2 / 100 mL blood

24
Q

Max exercise a-vO2diff value

A

~16 to 17 mL O2/100 mL blood

25
Q

a-vO2diff (mL O2 / 100 mL blood)

A

represents the extent to which oxygen is extracted from the blood as it passes through the body
VO2 = Q• x (a-v- )O2 difference
VO2 = HR x SV x (a-v- )O2 difference

26
Q

Fick Equation

A

represents the relationship of the body’s oxygen consumption (VO2) to the arterial – venous oxygen difference (a-vO2diff) and cardiac output (Q)

27
Q

Sinoartrial (SA) node

A

Initiates contraction signal (pacemaker)

  • contracts w/o neural stimulation with an intrinsic HR of ~ 100 bpm
  • pacemaker cells on posterior wall of right atrium (RA)
  • stimulates RA, LA contraction
28
Q

Atrioventricular (AV) node

A

Built in delay of .13 seconds allowing atria to contract before ventricles

  • located in right arterial wall near center of heart
  • contracts w/o neural stimulation with an intrinsic HR of ~40 bpm
29
Q

AV bundle (bundle of his)

A

relays signals to right and left ventricles

  • travels along interventricular septum
  • sends signals towards apex of heart
30
Q

Pirkinje Fibers

A

sends signals throughout right and left ventricles with 6x faster transmission
stimulate LV, RV contraction

31
Q

Estimating HRmax equation

A

208 - (0.7 x age in years)