Term
____: "big artery" - systemic arteries that deliver oxygenated blood to organs; thick, muscular wall and under high pressure. blood volume is called ____
___: arterioles. smallest branches of arteries. smooth muscle wall extensively innervated by autonomic fibers, which regulates resistance. account for __% of TPR ___: capillaries. largest total cross-sectional and surface area. high pressure is decreased through surface area. thin walled and site of exchange of nutrients, water, and gases.
___: merge from venules. lowest pressure in system. contain the highest proportion of blood. blood volume is called ___> |
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Definition
conduit artery - stressed volume
Resistant artery (60%)
microcirculation
vein - unstressed volume
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Term
____ - the pressure gradient across the entire systemic circulation (average pressure in the arteries).
How is it calculated? |
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Definition
Mean Arterial pressure
MAP = diastolic pressure + 1/3 pulse pressure
MAP = HR x SV x TPR; CO = HR x SV
MAP = (Ps + 2Pd)/3 -- so MAP is 2/3 diastolic pressure and 1/3 systolic pressure
Arterial compliance is also a component of MAP bc the aorta can stretch and absorb some of the pressure during a heartbeat. Loss of this compliance during aging is what causes elderly persons to have higher pulse pressure |
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Term
____ is pressure generated during ventricular contraction
____ is pressure in the arteries during cardiac relaxation
___ is the difference between systolic and diastolic pressures (Ps-Pd). It is the most important determinant in SV |
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Definition
aterial systolic pressure
arterial diastolic pressure
pulse pressure |
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Term
Explain compliance and elastic recoil |
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Definition
Properties of conduit arteries like the aorta.
Compliance: The ability of a material to stretch when external force is applied to it. as BP rises duirng a heart beat (Systole), the aorta expands to accommodate the extra blood that is in it at the time.
Elastic recoil: The opposite of compliance. As the aorta relaxes during diastole, its hgihly elastic wall recoils to push the blood out and return to its previous shape |
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Term
Mathematically quantify compliance and transmural (Distending) pressure |
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Definition
Compliance = dV/dP; P is distending/transmural pressure
Aortic compliance = SV/pulse pressure
Transmural pressure = Pin - Pout
Transmural pressure is the pressure difference between the inside and outside of a vessel... has nothing to do wtih downstream pressure |
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Term
How is arteriolar resistance regulated? Intrinsic and extrinsic regulation
How would an ACE inhibitor regulate BP? |
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Definition
INtrinsic: autoregulation. caused by alteration of BP or regional metabolic vaso-activator. Is important for distribution of blood fow to tissues and organs
Extrinsic: changes in arteriorlar radius caused by neural (sympathetic nerve innervation) and humoral (Angiotensiin II) factors. it is important for control of MAP
ACE inhibitor regulates BP by targetting angiotensin II
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Term
how does ohms law relate to organ blood flow? |
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Definition
Organ BF = dP / Organ resistance
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Term
3 organs are in parallel in the ciruclatory system
if you decrease blood flow to one organ, how does it affect the others? |
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Definition
decreasing bf in one organ doesn't affect the other organs except to increase their percentage of the total cardiac output |
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Term
Explain autoregulation of blow flow (myogenic mechanism) |
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Definition
increased BP activates mechanical stretch receptors on vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMC). This results in VSMC contraction and leads to a steady state of relatively constatn blood flow after an immediate, transient increase in flow
This process makes flow independent of pressure |
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Term
___ is the main factor of local regulation of blood flow
How does it work? |
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Definition
When O2 consumption > O2 supply, the tissues become hypoxic or ischemic
When this happens, metabolic vasodilators are released from the surrounding tissue and vasocontrictor release is reduced. This decreases vascular resistance and increases blood flow.
Ex of this situation: during exercise |
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Term
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Definition
Hypoxia - reduced oxygen tension
Ischemia - reduced oxygen flow |
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Term
___ is increased metabolic activity such as exercise increases metabolic vasodilaor release, resulting in local vasodilation and increased organ blood flow
___ is transiet pathological reduction of blood flow, such as if an artery were to be occulded, vasodilators would be released to increase blood flow.
What is the biggest difference between these two? |
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Definition
active hyperemia
reactive (passive) hyperemia
Difference: they have different tirggers, everything after that is th same (vasodilation response) |
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Term
Is CO2 a vasodilator or vasoconstrictor? |
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Definition
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Term
Extrinsic control of smooth muscle regulates MAP, and thus ____ (main purpose of extrinsic control)
4 extrinsic control factors? |
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Definition
Perfusion pressure
4 factors: Autonomic NS control (mainly sympathetic to control heart rate) Baroreceptor reflex detects CO2 concentration in blood and pH Chemoreceptors Hormonal control
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Term
explain how the medulla controls heart rate? |
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Definition
Sympathetic: Brain gets signal that body needs more blood.
Medulla sends signal to SA node to increase HR, increase myocardial contractility and induce vasoconstriction.
"Signal" = Norepinephrine release at sympathetic nerve terminals and binds to a-adrenergic receptors on resistant and capacitant vessels.
Parasympathetic: decreates HR |
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Term
Where are baroreceptors located and what do they do? |
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Definition
Located in aortic arch and carotid sinus
Increase in MAP causes vessels to stretch. Baroreceptors detect stretching or lack thereof and send a signal to the medulla to increase either sympathetic or parasympathetic activity and derease the other |
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Term
Where are chemoreceptors located and what do they do? |
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Definition
Located in aortic arch and carotid bodies
Activated by decrease in arterial PO2 & pH, or increase in arterial PCO2. Activated receptors induce vasoconstriction, resulting in an increase in BP. |
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Term
Where are volume receptors locate dnad what do they do? |
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Definition
located in the walls of large systemic veins and the right atrium. Respond to stretch the same as baroreceptors but also respond to changes in blood volume bc the change in volume will stretch the walls.
When the wall stretches, it induces ANP secretion, which causes increase kindey capillary permeability and thus increased glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and increased Na excretion (Increased water retention) |
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Term
What is the long-term mechanisms of kidney in blood pressure and blood volume regulation? |
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Definition
Renin-Angiotensin-Aldosterone system:
1. Reduced renal arterial pressure and blood volume cause the release of angiotensinogen from the liver and renin from juxtaglomerular cells. in the blood, these combine to form angiotensin I
2. Angiotensin I combines with ACE to form angiotensin II
3. Angiotensin II does 3 things: induces aldosterone release from adrenal cortex, decreases sodium excretion in proximal convoluted tubules, and increases TPR in peripheral arterioles.
All of these things ultimately result in increased blood volume and arterial pressure. |
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Term
Capillaries have large surface area snd slow fluid flow. What is the importance of that? |
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Definition
allow for efficient gas and solute exchange between tisues and blood
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Term
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Definition
Continuous - found in CNS, lungs, skin, skeletal muscle
Fenestrated - found in intestinal mucosa, exocrine glands, renal glomeruli, choroid plexus
Discontinuous - found in liver, spleen, bone marrow. |
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Term
Filtration v. absorption, in relation to starling's law |
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Definition
Absorption - inward force, driven by capillary oncotic pressure
Filtration - outward force, driven by interstitial oncotic pressure |
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Term
Endothelial cell regulation |
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Definition
Something about substance P inducing mast cell release of histamines and causeing local vasodilation and increased permeability at the site of injury |
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Term
How do the lymphatics work? |
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Definition
Collect fluids and solutes from the interstitium and return them to circulation. They carry absorbed substances and nutrients from the GI tract into circulation.
Defense fxn: filter lymph at lymph nodes and remove foreign proteins |
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Term
Why do small changes in venous pressure cause large changes in venous volume? |
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Definition
Because veins are very compliant (not very resistant)
This results in veins having a huge reservoir of blood (60% of total body blood) |
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Term
4 factors affecting venous return |
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Definition
Skeletal muscle pump: valves in peripheral veins close twhen the muscle surrounding it contracts
Resp Pump: During inhalation, thoracic cavity pressure decreases, which sucks blood from periphery into thoracic cavity. During exhalation, blood is driven toward the heart It is never driven backward into periphery
Venomotor tone: Sympathetic activity promotes constriction, which increase vasomotor tone which immediately increases venous pressure and increases venous wall tension (reduces compliance) and raises venous pressure
Central (intrathoracic) blood volume: SVC, IVC, right atrium and ventricle, left atirum, pulm circulation. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
How does each affect hydrostatic pressure?
Height (depth) Gravity |
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Definition
At a given depth or height of column, pressure will be the same no matter what shape the vessel is
Gravity increases pressure - which is why there is more pressure in the feet than there is in the head |
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Term
Poiseuille's Law:
How does pressure gradient affect flow rate? How does tube length affect flow rate? How does vessel radius affect flow rate? How does resistance affect flow rate? |
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Definition
Pressure gradient: proportional to flow, so increase pressure = increase flow
Tube length: inverse to flow, so increase tube length = decreased flwo
Radius: most important determinant. Because Poisuille's law has r^4, a 2x increase in radius results in an 16x increase in flow, and so on.
Resistance (viscosity): increased resistance decreases flow |
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Term
HOw is resistance measured? |
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Definition
It cannot be directly measured, so it has to be indirectly measured as a factor of pressure and flow
TPR= (Pmean - Pright atrium)/CO |
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Term
Equations for resistance in series and parallel |
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Definition
Series: Rt = R1 + R2 + R3....
Parallel: 1/Rt = 1/R1 + 1/R2 + 1/R3 |
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Term
2 important principles regarding parallel arrangment of blood vessels |
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Definition
Rt<Ri, even when Ri is the lowest of the resistances. So the advantage of parallel vessels in a greatly reduced resistance
Changes in Ri lead to little changes in Rt. So if one vessel is blocked, it won't greatly influence the system. |
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Term
Laminar v. turbulent flow |
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Definition
Laminar flow - velocity center > velocity edges
Turbulent flow - random, chaotic |
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Term
Factors affecting turbulent flow:
If velocity ____, turbulence increases If diameter ____, turbulence increases If density ____, turbulence increases If viscosity ___, turbulence increases |
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Definition
velocity increases
diameter increases
denisty increases
viscosity decreases |
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Term
Clinical significance of turbulence: |
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Definition
Good: ensure adequate mixing of blood, creates heart sounds
Bad: thrombus formation = plaques, aneurysms
Anemia promotes turbulence (decreased viscosity) |
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Term
What do each of the waves on the ECG mean? |
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Definition
P - depolarizaiton of atria during atrial systole
QRS complex - depolarization of left ventricle during isovolumetric contraction
ST segment - ejection
T wave - ventricular repolarization |
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Term
What causes each of the heart sounds? |
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Definition
S1 - mitral valve closing
S2 - aortic valve closing
S3 - aortic valve opening |
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Term
Where does ventricular systole and ventricular diastole begin and end? |
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Definition
Systole: begins at beginning of isovolumetric contraction, ends at beginning of isovolumetric relaxation
Diastole: begins in isovolumetric relaxation, ends at isovolumetric contraction |
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Term
What is preload and how does it affect stroke volume? What is afterload and how does it affect stroke volume? How does contractility affect SV? How does compliance affect SV? |
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Definition
Preload is the pressure of the ventricle while it's filling.
It icnreases SV by increasing end diastolic volume.
Afterload is the pressure of the aorta. It decreases stroke volume by increasing end systolic volume.
Contractility increases SV by decreasing ESV.
Compliance is the slope of the diastole curve decreases SV by decreasing EDV.
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Term
How does HTN affect work done by the hear? |
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Definition
increases internal work, decreaes external work, increases oxygen consumption |
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Term
3 ways that the body regulates stroke volume from minute to minute |
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Definition
Preload (filling pressure)
Afterload (aortic pressure)
Contractility |
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Term
What condition would cause hypertrophy or dilation of the left ventricle |
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Definition
hypertrophy: HTN (chronic) due to increased work load over several months
dilation: persistant elevated preload over several days (acute)
Both create a mechanical disadvantage |
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Term
How does HR affect diastole and systole? |
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Definition
increased hr significantly decreases diastole and only slightly decreases systole |
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Term
How does HR affect CO and SV? |
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Definition
CO drops dramatically at very low HR (<50 bpm)
CO drops at very high HR (>180 bpm) bc there is not enough time for the ventricle to fill during diastole
CO remains constant at normal HR (50-180 bpm) |
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Term
4 indices of cardiac contractility |
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Definition
Ejection fraction
velocity index
end systolic pressure-volume curve
ventricular function curve |
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Term
Almost 95% of ATP formation coems from ___. |
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Definition
Oxidative phosphorylation in mitochondria. |
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Term
___ is the key determinant for matching cardiac O2 demand |
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Definition
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Term
How does O2 extractio in the heart differ from that in the rest of the body? |
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Definition
In the heart, 70-80% of oxygen is extracted from coronary arteries, in body only 25% |
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Term
3 factors that affect coronary blood flow |
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Definition
mechanical compression - with each beat, the contracting heart squeezes the coronary arteries and increases their resistance to flow
Metabolic: |
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Term
How would changing contractility change coronary blood flow? |
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Definition
increasing contractility increases CBF
decreasing contractility (Beta blocker) decreases CBF |
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Term
how does restricted blood flow affect epicardium and endocardium |
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Definition
endocardium is affected first and usually is worse |
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Term
Sympathetic affect on coronary blood flow |
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Definition
weak, transient constriction followed by net secondary vasodilation due to increased O2 consumtpion |
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Term
Take home message: _____ predominantly controls coronary blood flow |
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Definition
local metabolic mechanisms |
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Term
sudden occlusion of a coronary artery?
what usually causes it? how is it treated? |
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Definition
heart attack (acute myocardial infarction)
usually caused by thrombus
treated with thrombolytic agent (tPA) |
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Term
3 things that affect infarct size? |
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Definition
size of ischemic area
level fo collateral flow
duration of ischemia |
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Term
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Definition
inserting a balloon or stent in affected artery to press plaque against wall and enlarge the artery |
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Term
In the heart, ___ is genearlly the parasympathetic ligand, and ___ is generally the sympathetic one. |
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Definition
acetylcholine, norepinephrin |
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Term
What is the purpose of the plateau period in the cardiac myocyte AP |
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Definition
maintain force generation
create a long refractory period |
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Term
The ___ is when all inactivation gates are closed and no electrical stimulus will elicit another AP. It runs from Phase ___ through part of phase ___. Purpose?
___ is when some inactivations gates are open and an AP requires an above average stimulus to happen. Runs from phase __ to start of phase ___. |
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Definition
absolute refractory period - 0-3 - allow for ventricular filling
relative refractory period - 3-4 |
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Term
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) is a ___ channel blocker, so it blocks the generation of a VENTRICULAR AP.
Someone who gets TTX poisoning will experience what problem? |
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Definition
Na
cardiac myocytes will be paralyzed |
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Term
Sympathetic/parasympathetic increases heart rate
Sympathetic acts on ___ receptors Parasympathetic acts on ___ receptors |
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Definition
sympathetic - Adreneric B1 receptors
Parasymp (vagal) - muscarinic acetylcholin |
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Term
___ fibers have the slowest conduction speed bc of their small diameter cells, few gap junctions, and slow phase 0.
___ fibers have the fastest conduction speen |
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Definition
AV nodal, purkinje fibers |
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Term
Ablation of the SA node slows down the HR to that of the next highest pacemaker, which is the ____
Ablation of this next pacemaker is very dangerous, why? |
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Definition
AV bundle (40-55 bpm)
If AV bundle is ablated, it goes to the next highest pacemaker (purkinje fibers) which are dangerously slow (25-40 bpm) |
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Term
What does a long PR interval suggest? What does a long QRS interval suggest? What does a depressed ST segment suggest? Whata does a convex or straight up ST segment sugget? What does a long QT interval suggest? |
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Definition
AV block
Bundle branch block
abnormal, non=specific
MI
Long QT |
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Term
A ___ is separation of post and neg charges.
the direction of this is always neg to pos |
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Definition
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Term
If the magnitude of the hearts vector is greater than normal, what does it suggest? |
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Definition
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Term
Normal range of heart axis is __ -__ deg |
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Definition
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Term
On an EKG, when the vector direction of the heart is the same as the limb lead, the tracing goes up (as in QRS complex) |
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Definition
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Term
If RR intervals are fairly constant, than HR = ?
If RR intervals vary, the avarage HR = ? |
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Definition
1500 mm/min/RR
Vary: HR = # of RR in 10 sec x 6 |
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Term
AV blocks
first degree = PR intrval > __s
second deg = ?
3rd deg = ? |
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Definition
first > 0.2 sec
second - 2 p waves for each QRS complex
third - atria and vet beat independently |
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Term
How is cardiacmyocyte muscle diff than skeletal? |
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Definition
smaller size
less t-tubules (skeletal has 2/sarcomere, cardiac has 1)
intercalated disk in cell-cell jxn
aerobic metabolism |
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Term
___ is the cellular basis for a fxnal syncytium of the heart.
___ strongly transmit MECHANICAL signals from cell to cell. "molecular rivets"
-___ transport ELECTRICAL signals form cell to cell |
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Definition
intercalated disks
desmosomes
gap jxns
desmosomes and gap jxns are in intercalated disk |
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Term
Ca-induced Ca release
Ryanodin receptor contraction induced by increased CA when CA binds to troponin C contraction ends when CA returns to SR thorugh SERCA Phospholamban regulates SERCA |
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Definition
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Term
___ is the intrinsic contractile force at cellular level in heart. ___ is more important determinant to alter this. |
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Definition
contractility, Ca handling |
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Term
Activation of B-adrenergic receptors causes cAMP from ATP and then activations PKA, which phosphorylates phospholamban
Phosphorylated phospholamban cauess SERCA activity to increase - take more Ca into SR, with more Ca in SR, next beat will be stronger |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
1. blocks Na/K pumps, resultsi n intracellular Na accumulation
2. Increase in intracellular Na causes Na-Ca exchanger to not work bc cell doesn't want to take up more Na, and thus it takes up more Ca
Increase in Ca cuaes an increase in contractility
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Term
What does increased HR do to contractility? |
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Definition
Increases it- more AP per min, more Ca in flux per min, more Ca in Sr, increased contraction
Positive staircase or bowditch effect |
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Term
Starling's law of the heart: the more the heart fills with blood during diastole, the more forcefully it will contract during systole. creates more active tension |
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Definition
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Term
___ i the ability of ventricular wall to passively stretch. iti s 1/the slope of the diastole curve, so a greater slope = lower compliance |
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Definition
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Term
Preload is determined by EDV or ESV?
What hapens to preload in heart failure?
What is afterload?
What happens to afterload in HTN |
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Definition
edv
preload dramatically increases in herat failure bc of decreased myocyte contractiltiy
Afterload is the pressure that the heart ejects against (pressure of aorta)
Afterload dramatically increases in HTN? |
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Term
Measure of aortic pressure is a good way to measure the heart's ____ |
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Definition
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Term
Heart contraction is isometric or isotonic? |
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Definition
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Term
Vmax
Changes in ___ will shift Vmax
Vmax (and contractility) are ___-independent
__ is when Vmax = 0 |
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Definition
maximum velocity of heart muscle shortening
contractility
length
afterload |
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