circulatory system part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

ostia

A

crustacean heart - hemolymph returns to the heart through these holes
contains valves that open and close to regulate the flow

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2
Q

what controls the crustacean heart?

A

neurogenic

nervous system signals control contraction

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3
Q

what is the cardiac cycle in arthropods

A

neutrons spontaneously depolarize causing cardiomycotes to contract
decreases volume of heart, increases pressure
valves in ostia close, forcing blood to leave through arteries
ligaments pull on walls of heart increasing volume and decreasing pressure
valves in ostia open, sucking blood into heart

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4
Q

types of myocardium

A

mammal - compact

fish/amphibians - spongy

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5
Q

how many layers does the pericardium have?

A

2 layers

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6
Q

what are the four main parts of vertebrate heart walls?

A

pericardium
epicardium
myocardium
endocardium

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7
Q

pericardium

A

sac of connective tissue that surrounds heart
outer (parietal) and inner (visceral) layers
- space between layers filled with lubricating fluid

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8
Q

epicardium

A

outer layer of heart, continuous with visceral pericardium

contains nerves that regulate heart/ coronary arteries

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9
Q

myocardium

A

layer of heart muscle cells - cardiomycotes
spongy - meshwork of loosely connected (fish/amphibians)
compact - tightly packed cells arranged regularly (mammals, birds reptiles)

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10
Q

endocardium

A

innermost layer of connective tissue covered by epithelial cells (endothelium)

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11
Q

four chambers of fish hearts

A

sinus venosus
atrium
ventricle
bulbous arteriosus

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12
Q

fish heart cycle

A

passive valves open and close depending on pressure differences
unidirectional flow of blood
bulbous arteriousus does not contract but instead serves and pressure/ volume reservoir

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13
Q

amphibian heart

A

3 chambered: 2 atria and 1 ventricle

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14
Q

trabaculae - amphibian heart

A

in ventricle - helps prevent mixing of de/oxygenated blood

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15
Q

spiral fold in conus arteriosus - amphibian heart

A

helps direct deoxygenated blood to pulmocutaneous circuit and oxygenated blood to systemic circuit

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16
Q

reptile hearts

A

five chambered - 2 atria and 3 ventricles

17
Q

caveum venosum- reptile hearts

A

leads to systemic aortas

18
Q

caveum pulmonale

A

leads to pulmonary artery

19
Q

caveum arteriosum

A

third compartment of ventricle

20
Q

right to left shunt (reptile heart)

A

deoxygenated blood bypasses pulmonary circuit and enters systemic circuit
breath holding

21
Q

left to right shunt

A

oxygenated blood reenters pulmonary circuit

helps oxygen delivery to myocardium

22
Q

bird and mammals hearts

A

four chambers:
2 thin walled atria
2 thick walled ventricles

23
Q

intraventricular septum - birds and mammals

A

separates ventricles

24
Q

atrioventricular valves

A

between atria and ventricles
tricuspid - right
bicuspid (or mitral) - left

25
Q

semi lunar valves

A

between ventricles and arteries
aortic - left ventricle and aorta
pulmonary - between right ventricle and pulmonary artery

26
Q

phases of cardiac cycle (mammal heart)

A
systole 
- contraction
- blood forced out
diastole
- relaxation
- blood enters the heart
27
Q

mammalian cardiac cycle

A
  1. ventricular diastole
  2. atrial systole
  3. ventricular systole (isovolumetric)
  4. ventricular systole (ventricular ejection)
  5. ventricular diastole
28
Q

pressure in ventricles

A

left ventricle - contracts forcefully, higher pressure

right ventricle - lower resistance, less pressure to protect delicate blood vessels

29
Q

velocity in blood

A

highest in arteries
middle in veins
lowest in capillaries

30
Q

mean average arterial pressure in aorta

A

2/3 diastolic pressure + 1/3 systolic pressure

31
Q

resisters in series

A

Rt= R1+R2

32
Q

resisters in parallel

A

1/Rt = 1/R1 +1/R2

33
Q

law of bulk flow

A

Q= P/R (pressure over resistance)

34
Q

diffusion rate

A

CAD/X

concentration x surface area x diffusion coefficient / distance