cardiovascular physiology definition of terms cardiac cycle - refers to the events of one complete...

21
Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract and then relax. Systole - The time period when the heart contracting. Diastole - The time period when the heart in the state of relaxation. Systolic Pressure - Peak pressure in the arteries when ventricles contract. Diastolic Pressure - Lowest pressure in the arteries when ventricles relax. End-systolic Volume – Volume of blood in the left ventricle at the end of contraction. End-diastolic Volume – Volume of blood in the left ventricle at the end of filling.

Upload: christal-willis

Post on 13-Dec-2015

215 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyDefinition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat

during which both atria and ventricles contract and then relax. Systole - The time period when the heart contracting. Diastole - The time period when the heart in the state of relaxation. Systolic Pressure - Peak pressure in the arteries when ventricles

contract. Diastolic Pressure - Lowest pressure in the arteries when

ventricles relax. End-systolic Volume – Volume of blood in the left ventricle at the

end of contraction. End-diastolic Volume – Volume of blood in the left ventricle at the

end of filling.

Page 2: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

Page 3: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

Stroke Volume Volume of blood pumped by the heart in one contraction

SV = EDV – ESV

Where SV - stroke volume

EDV - end-diastolic volume

ESV - end-systolic volume

Stroke volume usually consider only volume of blood pumped from the left side of the heart because that is the amount of blood sent to all the tissues of our body.

Page 4: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology Stroke Volume can increase during exercise. Stroke volume depends on preload, afterload and

contractility.

Preload The pressure stretching the ventricular walls prior to

contraction. Depends on ventricular filling and venous return i.e.

return of blood back to the heart.

Afterload Pressure the ventricle must generate to eject blood into

aorta. Depends on arterial pressure

Page 5: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyContractility (Inotropy) Force that muscle can create at given length.

Page 6: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyCardiac Output Amount of blood in liter per minute pumped by the heart

particularly the left ventricle.

CO = SV x HR

Where CO – cardiac output (L/min)

SV – stroke volume (L)

HR – heart beat rate (beat/min)

Normal cardiac output is 5.0 L/min.

Page 7: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

Ejection Fraction Fraction of blood ejected by ventricle relative to end-

diastolic volume

EF = (SV / EDV) x 100%

Normal EF is usually greater than 60%.

Page 8: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyCardiac Cycle Events that occur in one heart beat.

Page 9: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyAtrial Contraction Semilunar valves close, AV valves open. Pressure within the atrial chambers increases, which forces

remaining blood in the chambers flow across the open atrioventricular (AV) valves.

Isovolumetric Contraction All valves close. Pressure within ventricles increases.

Ventricular Ejection Semilunar valves open, AV valves close. Intraventricular pressure higher than pressure in large arteries. Semilunar valves forced to open, blood rushes out from ventricle.

Isovolumetric Relaxation All valves close. Intraventricular pressure falls causes all valves to close.

Page 10: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

Ventricular Filling Semilunar valve close, AV valve open. Intraventricular pressure falls below arterial pressure. Blood flow through the atria into the ventricles. Intraventricular pressure continues to briefly fall because the

ventricles are still undergoing relaxation. Once the ventricles are completely relaxed, their pressures will

slowly rise as they fill with blood from the atria.

Page 11: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology Pressure-Volume Relationship

Page 12: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology The P-V plot shown here is for left ventricle (LV) a, b, c and d indicate phases in cardiac cycle

- a : ventricular filling

- b : isovolumteric contraction

- c : ejection

- d : isovolumetric relaxation

Point 1 : end-diastolic pressure (EDP) and end-diastolic

volume (EDV). Point 2 : LVP exceeds aortic diastolic pressure, the aortic valve

opens, ejection phase begins. Point 3 : aortic valve closes, ventricle relaxes isovolumetrically. Point 4 : LVP falls below left atrial pressure mitral valve opens,

ventricle begins to fill.

Page 13: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology ESV – end-systolic volume. EDV – end-diastolic volume. ESPVR – end-systolic pressure-volume relationship EDPVR – end-diastolic pressure-volume relationship SV – stroke volume

Stroke Work (SW) Work done by the ventricle to eject a volume of blood (i.e., stroke

volume) into the aorta. Basically SW is the area inside the P-V plot. Another term is Cardiac Work which is simply product of SW and

heart rate.

Cardiac Work = Stroke Work x Heart Rate

Page 14: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

Page 15: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular PhysiologyHEMODYNAMICS The study of blood flow and blood pressure. Hemodynamics is essential to understand cardiovascular

dynamics system. Some basic relationships :

F = ΔP/R

Where F – blood flow (unit : ml/s)

Δ P – pressure difference along vessel (unit : mmHg)

R – resistance to flow (if it is not steady and change with time we call it impedance) (unit mmHg/ml/s)

Page 16: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

To apply the concept in heart, suppose we know aortic and intraventricular pressure ventricular ejection. To find flow of blood :

F = (PIv - Pao)/R

Factors that influence resistance to flow : - length and diameter of vessel - viscosity of blood

Page 17: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

VESSEL TYPE DIAMETER (mm) FUNCTION

Aorta 25 Pulse dampening and distribution

Large Arteries 1.0 - 4.0 Distribution of arterial blood

Small Arteries 0.2 - 1.0 Distribution and resistance

Arterioles 0.01 - 0.20 Resistance (pressure & flow regulation)

Capillaries 0.006 - 0.010 Exchange

Venules 0.01 - 0.20 Exchange, collection, and capacitance

Veins 0.2 - 5.0 Capacitance function (blood volume)

Vena Cava 35 Collection of venous blood

Page 18: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Cardiovascular Physiology

VASCULAR COMPLIANCE ability of a blood vessel wall to expand with changes in

pressure.

C = ΔV/ΔPC – vessel compliance

ΔV – change in blood volume

ΔP – change in pressure Reciprocal of compliance is elastance.

What is the relationship between blood flow and volume?

Page 19: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Frank-Starling Mechanism

The change of heart’s force of contraction in response to change in venous return.

During exercise, venous return i.e. blood that returns to the heart increased which then causes increase to stroke volume.

Frank-Starling mechanism tells how change in venous return will alters the stroke volume.

Increased venous return increases the ventricular filling (end-diastolic volume) and therefore preload, which is the initial stretching of the cardiac myocytes prior to contraction. Myocyte stretching causes an increase in force generation. This mechanism enables the heart to eject the additional venous return, thereby increasing stroke volume.

Page 20: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Frank-Starling Mechanism

Page 21: Cardiovascular Physiology Definition of terms Cardiac cycle - Refers to the events of one complete heartbeat during which both atria and ventricles contract

Frank-Starling Mechanism