State the structures of the cardiac tissue.
Describe the myocardium
Cardiac muscle fibres arranged into 4 chambers: 2 atria, 2 ventricles
Describe the conduction system
Specialised tissue which conducts nerve impulses through heart, SA and AV node, bundle of His, bundle branches and purkyne fibres
Describe the nerve supply
Nerve branches from both sympathetic and parasympathetic divisions of the ANS - regulates heart rate and force of contraction
Describe the thickness of cardiac walls
Myocardium of left ventricle is much thicker than the right.
Describe blood supply to the heart.
How does coronary artery disease occur?
When coronary arteries cannot deliver blood adequately: plaques in arterial walls
How does a myocardial infarction occur?
When blood supply to heart is completely blocked; muscle dies
Describe the structure of the pericardium.
Double-walled sac around the heart composed of:
- superficial fibrous pericardium
- deep two-layer serous pericardium
- parietal layer lines the internal surface of the fibrous pericardium
- visceral layer lines the surface of the heart
- Separated by the fluid-filled pericardial cavity
Describe the function of the pericardium.
State the functions of the heart.
State and describe the two circuits of the heart.
Describe the movement of blood in the heart.
Define cardiac cycle
Electrical, pressure and volume changes that occur in functional heart between two heart beats
State and describe the two phases of the cardiac cycle
Diastolic phase: When myocardium is relaxing
Systolic phase: myocardium is contracting
Name the valve between the right atrium and right ventricle?
Tricuspid valve
Name the valve between the right ventricle and pulmonary trunk.
pulmonary semilunar valves
Name the valve between the left atrium and left ventricle.
bicuspid valve
Name the valve between the left ventricle and aorta.
Aortic semi-lunar valves
Describe atrial diastole and systole
Describe ventricular filling: mid-to-late diastole
Describe ventricular systole
Describe ventricular diastole
Ventricles relax; blood backflow, closes semilunar valves (“dubb”)
- Blood once again flowing into relaxed atria and passively into ventricles
Describe ‘lubb’ and ‘dubb’
Lubb - when the atrioventricular valves - tricuspid and bicuspid - close i.e atrial diastole
Dubb - when the semi-lunar valves - pulmonary and aortic - close i.e ventricular diastole