7.5: The Cardiac Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

How many times does the cardiac cycle complete per minute

A

70

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2
Q

Three phases of the Cardiac Cycle

A

Diastole - Relaxation of the entire heart

Atrial systole - Contraction of the Atrium

Ventricular systole - Contract of the Ventricle

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3
Q

Meanings of diastole and systole

A

Diastole = Relaxtion

Systole = Contraction

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4
Q

Process of Diastole (Relaxation of the Heart)

A

Blood returns to the atria through the pulmonary vein and the vena cava.

As the atria fill, the pressure in them rises. When atrial pressure exceeds that of the ventricles, the atrioventricular valves open allow the blood to flow into the ventricles

Both the atria and the ventricles are relaxed at this point. The relaxation of the ventricle walls cause them to recoil and reduce pressure within.

This causes pressure to be lower than in the aorta and the pulmonary artery and so the semi-lunar valves close

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5
Q

Process of Atrial Systole

A

The contraction of the atrial walls, along with the recoil of the relaxed ventricle walls, forces the remaining blood into the ventricles from the atria

Throughout this stage the muscle of the ventricle walls remains relaxed

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6
Q

Process of Ventricular Systole

A

After a short delay to allow the ventricles to fill with blood, they contract simultaneously. This increases the blood pressure within them, forcing shut the atrioventricular valves and preventing back-flow of blood into the atria.

With the closed atrioventricular valves, the pressure of in the ventricles rises further. Once it exceeds that in the aorta and the pulmonary artery, blood is forced from the ventricles into these vessels.

The ventricles have thick muscular walls meaning they pump blood forcefully. The left ventricle wall is thicker than the right because it has to pump to the extremities.

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7
Q

Valves in the control of Blood Flow

A

Blood will always move from a region of higher pressure to one of lower pressure.

Valves are used to prevent any unwanted backflow of blood

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8
Q

Examples of valves

A

Atrioventricular valves - between the atrium and the ventricle. Prevent the backflow of blood when ventricular pressure exceeds atrial pressure

Semi-Lunar valves - in the aorta and pulmonary artery. Prevent the backflow of blood into the ventricles when the pressure in these vessels exceed that of the ventricles

Pocket vales - in veins. Prevents the backflow of blood into the veins away from the heart. Ensures blood goes towards the heart.

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9
Q

Design of valves

A

Made up of a number of flaps of tough, flexible and fibrous tissue.

When pressure is greater on the convex side of these cusps, rather than on the concave side, they move apart to allow blood to flow through these cusps.

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10
Q

Mammals system

A

Mammals have a closed circulatory system in which blood is confined to vessels, allowing the pressure within them to be maintained.

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11
Q

Cardiac Output

A

Cardiac output (dm^3/min) = heart rate (bpm) x Stroke volume (dm^3)

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12
Q

Chamber with the highest pressure

A

The ventricles have the highest pressure.

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13
Q

Summary of diastole

A
  1. Blood enters the atria and ventricles from the pulmonary artery/vena cava
  • Semi-lunar valves closed
  • Left and right atrioventricular valves open
  • Relaxtion of ventricles allows blood to enter from atria

Atria are relaxed and fill with blood, so are the ventricles

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14
Q

Summary of Atrial Systole

A
  1. Atria contract, pushing blood into the ventricles. Ventricles remain relaxed
  • Semi-lunar valves closed
  • Left and right atrioventricular valves open
  • blood pumped from atria to ventricles
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15
Q

Summary of Ventricular Systole

A
  1. Atria relax, ventricles contract, pushing blood away from the heart through pulmonary arteries and the aorta.
  • Semi-Lunar valves open
  • Left and right atrioventricular valves closed
  • Ventricles contract and walls thicken
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16
Q

At what points does the heart ‘beat’ (2)

A
  1. End of diastole when the semi-lunar valves close

2. When the atrioventricular valves close during Ventricular Systole