Cardiovascular System
The Cardiovascular System
• A closed system of the heart and blood
vessels
• The heart pumps blood
• Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all
parts of the body
• The function of the cardiovascular
system is to deliver oxygen and
nutrients and to remove carbon dioxide
and other waste products
The Heart
• Location
• Thorax between the lungs
• Pointed apex directed toward left hip
• About the size of your fist
The Heart
Figure 11.1
Slide
The Heart: Coverings
• Pericardium – a double serous
membrane
• Visceral pericardium
• Next to heart
• Parietal pericardium
• Outside layer
• Serous fluid fills the space between the
layers of pericardium
The Heart: Heart Wall
• Three layers
• Epicardium
• Outside layer
• This layer is the parietal pericardium
• Connective tissue layer
• Myocardium
• Middle layer
• Mostly cardiac muscle
• Endocardium
• Inner layer
• Endothelium
External Heart Anatomy
The Heart: Chambers
• Right and left side act as separate pumps
• Four chambers
• Atria
• Receiving chambers
• Right atrium
• Left atrium
• Ventricles
• Discharging chambers
• Right ventricle
• Left ventricle
Blood Circulation
PLACENTA
UMBILICAL VEIN
DUCTUS VENOSUS
INFERIOR VENA CAVA
RIGHT ATRIUM
FORAMEN OVALE
LEFT ATRIUM
LEFT VENTRICLE
ASCENDING AORTA
HEAD & UPPER BODY
SUPERIOR VENA CAVA
RIGHT ATRIUM
RIGHT VENTRICLE
PULMONARY TRUNK
DUCTUS ARTERIOSUS
DESCENDING AORTA
UMBILICAL ARTERIES
PLACENTA
The Heart: Valves
• Allow blood to flow in only one direction
• Four valves
• Atrioventricular valves – between atria and
ventricles
• Bicuspid valve (left)
• Tricuspid valve (right)
• Semilunar valves between ventricle and
artery
• Pulmonary semilunar valve
• Aortic semilunar valve
The Heart: Valves
• Valves open as blood is pumped
through
• Held in place by chordae tendineae
(“heart strings”)
• Close to prevent backflow
Operation of Heart Valves
Incompetent valve = backflow and repump
Stenosis = stiff= heart workload increased
May be replaced
Lup Dub Heart Sound
The Heart: Associated Great Vessels
• Aorta
• Leaves left ventricle
• Pulmonary arteries
• Leave right ventricle
• Vena cava
• Enters right atrium
• Pulmonary veins (four)
• Enter left atrium
Coronary Circulation
• Blood in the heart chambers does not
nourish the myocardium
• The heart has its own nourishing
circulatory system
• Coronary arteries
• Cardiac veins
• Blood empties into the right atrium via the
coronary sinus
Rapid heart beat
= Inadequate blood
= Angina Pectoris
The Heart: Conduction System
• Intrinsic conduction system
(nodal system)
• Heart muscle cells contract, without nerve
impulses, in a regular, continuous way
The Heart: Conduction System
• Special tissue sets the pace
• Sinoatrial node (right atrium)
• Pacemaker
• Atrioventricular node (junction of r&l atria
and ventricles)
• Atrioventricular bundle (Bundle of His)
• Bundle branches (right and left)
• Purkinje fibers
Heart Contractions
Figure 11.5
Electrocardiograms (EKG/ECG)
• Three formations
– P wave: impulse across atria
– QRS complex: spread of impulse down septum,
around ventricles in Purkinje fibers
– T wave: end of electrical activity in ventricles
Electrocardiograms (EKG/ECG)
(cont.)
Figure 8.15B, C
Damage to AV node = release of ventricles
from control = slower heart beat
Slower heart beat can lead to fibrillation
Fibrillation = lack of blood flow to the heart
Tachycardia = more than 100 beats/min
Bradychardia = less than 60 beats/min
The Heart: Cardiac Cycle
• Atria contract simultaneously
• Atria relax, then ventricles contract
• Systole = contraction
• Diastole = relaxation
Filling of Heart Chambers –
the Cardiac Cycle
Figure 11.6
The Heart: Cardiac Output
• Cardiac output (CO)
• Amount of blood pumped by each side of
the heart in one minute
• CO = (heart rate [HR]) x (stroke volume
[SV])
• Stroke volume
• Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle
in one contraction
Slide
CO = HR x SV
5250 ml/min = 75 beats/min x 70 mls/beat
Norm = 5000 ml/min
Entire blood supply passes through body once
per minute.
CO varies with demands of the body.
Cardiac Output Regulation
Figure 11.7
Slide
The Heart: Regulation of Heart
Rate
• Stroke volume usually remains relatively
constant
• Starling’s law of the heart – the more that
the cardiac muscle is stretched, the
stronger the contraction
• Changing heart rate is the most
common way to change cardiac output
Slide
Regulation of Heart Rate
• Increased heart rate
• Sympathetic nervous system
• Crisis
• Low blood pressure
• Hormones
• Epinephrine
• Thyroxine
• Exercise
• Decreased blood volume
Slide
The Heart: Regulation of Heart
Rate
• Decreased heart rate
• Parasympathetic nervous system
• High blood pressure or blood volume
• Dereased venous return
• In Congestive Heart Failure the heart is
worn out and pumps weakly. Digitalis
works to provide a slow, steady, but
stronger beat.
Decline in pumping efficiency of heart
Inadequate circulation
Progressive, also coronary atherosclerosis, high
blood pressure and history of multiple
Myocardial Infarctions
Left side fails = pulmonary congestion and
suffocation
Right side fails = peripheral congestion and
edema
Blood Vessels: The Vascular
System
• Taking blood to the tissues and back
• Arteries
• Arterioles
• Capillaries
• Venules
• Veins
Slide
The Vascular System
Figure 11.8b
Slide
Blood Vessels: Anatomy
• Three layers (tunics)
• Tunic intima
• Endothelium
• Tunic media
• Smooth muscle
• Controlled by sympathetic nervous
system
• Tunic externa
• Mostly fibrous connective tissue
Slide
Differences Between Blood Vessel
Types
• Walls of arteries are the thickest
• Lumens of veins are larger
• Skeletal muscle “milks” blood in veins
toward the heart
• Walls of capillaries are only one cell
layer thick to allow for exchanges
between blood and tissue
Slide
Movement of Blood Through
Vessels
• Most arterial blood is
pumped by the heart
• Veins use the milking
action of muscles to
help move blood
Figure 11.9
Slide
Capillary Beds
• Capillary beds
consist of two
types of vessels
• Vascular shunt –
directly connects an
arteriole to a venule
Figure 11.10 Slide
Capillary Beds
• True capillaries –
exchange vessels
• Oxygen and
nutrients cross to
cells
• Carbon dioxide
and metabolic
waste products
cross into blood
Figure 11.10 Slide
Diffusion at Capillary Beds
Figure 11.20
Slide
Arterial pulse
Blood pressure
Repiratory Rate
Body Temperature
All indicate the efficiency of the system
Pulse
• Pulse –
pressure wave
of blood
• Monitored at
“pressure
points” where
pulse is easily
palpated
Figure 11.16
Slide
Blood Pressure
• Measurements by health professionals
are made on the pressure in large
arteries
• Systolic – pressure at the peak of
ventricular contraction
• Diastolic – pressure when ventricles relax
• Pressure in blood vessels decreases as
the distance away from the heart
increases
Slide
Measuring Arterial Blood Pressure
Figure 11.18
Slide
Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors
• Neural factors
• Autonomic nervous system adjustments
(sympathetic division)
• Renal factors
• Regulation by altering blood volume
• Renin – hormonal control
Slide
Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors
• Temperature
• Heat has a vasodilation effect
• Cold has a vasoconstricting effect
• Chemicals
• Various substances can cause increases or
decreases
• Diet
Slide
Variations in Blood Pressure
• Human normal range is variable
• Normal
• 140–110 mm Hg systolic
• 80–75 mm Hg diastolic
• Hypotension
• Low systolic (below 110 mm HG)
• Often associated with illness
• Hypertension
• High systolic (above 140 mm HG)
• Can be dangerous if it is chronic
Slide