Physiology: Cardiac Cycle Flashcards

1
Q

What is responsible for the heat sounds S1 (Lub) and S2 (Dub)?

A

The closing of the heart valves

S1 = atrioventricular valves
S2 = Semilunar valves
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2
Q

Define one cardiac cycle

A

All events from the beginning of one heartbeat to the beginning of the next

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3
Q

Define diastole

A
  • Ventricles relax and fill with blood

- Starts with S2 sound (dub)

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4
Q

Define systole

A
  • Atria contract
  • Ventricles contract
  • Starts with S1 sounds (Lub)
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5
Q

Give the average lengths of systole and diastole

A
  • Systole ~0.3secs

- Diastole ~0.5secs

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6
Q

List the events of the cardiac cycle

A

1) Isovolumetric ventricular relaxation
2) Passive filling of ventricles

3) Atrial Contraction
4) Atrioventricular valves close
5) Isovolumetric ventricular contraction
6) Ventricular ejection
7) Semilunar valves close

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7
Q

Describe the events of passive filling

A
  • Very low pressure in ventricles and atria
  • AV valves open, allowing venous return to flow into the ventricles
  • Ventricles become 80% full through passive filling
  • Aortic pressure drops to ~80mmHg
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8
Q

Describe the events of atrial contraction

A
  • Ventricular filling is completed
  • Brings end diastolic volume up to ~130ml (resting adult)
  • Starts at the P-wave on an ECG
  • Ends at the start of the QRS complex on an ECG
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9
Q

Describe the events of isovolumetric ventricular contraction

A
  • Starts AFTER the QRS complex
  • Ventricular contraction starts
  • When ventricular pressure exceeds atrial pressure the AV valves shut (Lub)
  • Aortic valve is still closed already, so blood is isolated
  • Ventricular pressure rises steeply
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10
Q

What causes the atrioventricular valves to close?

A

Rising ventricular pressure

When ventricular pressure exceeds atrial pressure the AV valves shut

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11
Q

Describe the events of ventricular ejection?

A
  • Ventricular pressure exceeds aortic/pulmonary artery pressure, so semilunar valves open
  • Stroke volume is ejected, and the end systolic volume remains in the ventricle
  • Aortic pressure rises
  • The T-wave on an ECG signals ventricular repolarization
  • Ventricles start to relax, ventricular pressure starts to drop
  • When ventricular < aortic/pulmonary artery pressure, the semilunar valves shuts
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12
Q

What causes the semilunar valves to open?

A

Ventricular pressure exceeding aortic/pulmonary artery pressure

During ventricular ejection

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13
Q

What causes the semilunar valves to shut?

A

Ventricular pressure falling lower than aortic/pulmonary

During ventricular ejection

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14
Q

Describe the events of isovolumetric ventricular relaxation

A
  • Starts as semilunar valves close
  • Blood is sealed in ventricles, as the AV valves are still closed
  • Pressure drops as muscle relaxes
  • When the ventricular pressure falls below atrial pressure the AV valves open
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15
Q

When do the AV valves open?

A

When the ventricular pressure is less than the atrial pressure

During isovolumetric ventricular relaxation

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16
Q

How is the decrease in arterial pressure during diastole minimised?

A

The walls of the arteries close to the heart are elastic

Thus they recoil as the pressure drops, decreasing the volume. Thus the pressure doesn’t drop as far