The Heart Flashcards
What is the heart?
- A muscular organ that pumps blood through the circulatory system by increasing blood pressure relative to the lowest blood pressure in the blood vessels
- The difference in pressure causes the blood to flow
What is the wall of the heart made up of?
- EPICARDIUM- outer layer of heart wall and inner layer of pericardial membrane
- MYOCARDIUM- cardiac muscle
- ENDOCARDIUM- lines chambers and covers heart valves
What is the pericardium?
- A double walled sac that encloses the heart for protection of the heart
- Fluid between the inner and outer pericardial membranes lubricates the movement of the heart
What is cardiac muscle joined by?
Intercalated discs
What is cardiac muscle made up of?
Cardiomyocytes
Why do cardiomyocytes need to be able to contract in coordination?
To efficiently pump blood
What is an intercalated disc?
A type of cell junction that joins all cardiomyocytes to allow them to contract in a coordinated manner
Why do cardiomyocytes have so many mitochondria?
So they can undergo a lot of aerobic respiration and so do not fatigue under repeated contraction
What is the function of the papillary muscles?
Prevent the heart valves from folding too far back during heart contractions
What is the function of the chordate tendineae?
Connect the papillary muscles to the cusps of the atrioventricular valves
What is the function of the trabecular carneae?
Line the ventricles to help to help the papillary muscles in preventing the infolding of the atrio-vetricular valves
What are the two layers of the pericardium?
- FIBROUS PERICARDIUM- outer layer made of strong connective tissue, largely of a fixed shape
- SEROUS PERICARDIUM- inner layer made of serous membrane, which is smooth to allow a sliding motion
What does the pericardial fluid protect?
Protects the heart against infection and blunt trauma, and lubricates the heart’s movements
What are the three stages of the cardiac cycle?
- Atrial systole
- Ventricular systole
- Diastole
What happens in atrial sytstole?
- The muscles of the atria contract
- The pressure inside the atria increases
- The semilunar valves in the vena cava and the pulmonary vein close
- The triscupid and biscupid valves opens, allowing blood into the ventricles
- Pressure decreases
- Last about 0.1 seconds
What happens in ventricular systole?
- Muscle of ventricles contract
- Pressure inside ventricles increases
- The triscupid and biscupid valves close
- The semilunar valves in the aorta and pulmonary arteries open
- Pressure decreases
- Lasts about 0.3 seconds
What happens in diastole?
- Pressure in the ventricles decreases
- Semilunar valves in the aorta and the pulmonary arteries close
- All the heart muscles relax
- Blood flows into the atria and ventricles again from the vena cava and pulmonary vein
- Blood pressure remains low inside the atria and ventricles
How are valves controlled?
High pressure behind the valve forces it to open and high pressure in front of the valve closes it