cardiovascular system
-contains a muscular, four chambered heart, blood vessels and blood
right side of heart
sends blood to lungs through arteries to be reoxygenated
left side of heart
receives oxygenated blood through veins and sends it around body
heart
four-chambered structure composed mostly of cardiac muscle
-contains two pumps, one on each side
pulmonary circulation
-the acceptance of deoxygenated blood by the right side of the heart and the pumping of it through arteries to the lungs
systemic circulation
-the acceptance of oxygenated blood from the veins in the left side of the heart and the pumping it around the body
atria
thin-walled structures of which receive blood from the lungs or body
-once filled they pump blood to the ventricles
ventricles
- once filled with blood, the ventricles contract to send blood to the lungs or through systemic circulation
atrioventrical valves
-separate the atrium from the ventricles
semilunar valves
separate the ventricles from the vasculature
pulmonary valve
the valve that separates the right ventricle from pulmonary circulation
aortic valve
the valve that separates the left ventricle from aorta
sinoatrial node
the location of impulse initiation
atrial systole
atrial contraction due to the senatorial node
-provides more pressure for ventricle
atrial kick
the extra pressure due to the additional volume of this blood
AV node
pukinje fibers
the last stop for the pulse produced by the SA node
-these fibers disperse the pulse throughout the ventricular muscle
vagus nerve
provides the parasympathetic(“rest-and-digest) signals of the heart
systole
the contraction of the ventricles and closure of the AV valves which pumps blood from the ventricles
diastole
-the heart is relaxed, the semilunar valves are closed and blood from the atria fills the ventricles
cardiac output
total blood volume pumped by a ventricle in a minute
-CO=Heart rate x Stroke volume
arteries
capillaries
Venules
-capillaries join together to form these and these form together to form veins