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PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES

PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

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Page 1: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

 

PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES

Page 2: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Cardiac Conduction System

• SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial

• AV node – atrioventricular

• AV bundle

Page 3: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial

• Initiates impulses that contract the heart without brain or nerve signals.

• Located at the right atrium

• Impulse travels to left atrium and contracts it.

Page 4: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

AV node - atrioventricular

• Impulse slowly moves through this node in right atrium.

Page 5: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

AV bundle

• Located in septum

• End in purkinje fibers - in both ventricles

• Ventricles are stimulated to contract.

Page 6: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Contractions

• Normal average 70-75 beats/min.

• Emotions, exercise, hormones, pain, anxiety, fear, and anger can affect this.

Page 7: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Electrocardiogram (ECG)

• Graphic record of the heart’s action currents.

Page 8: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Electrocardiogram (ECG)

• An ECG is printed on paper covered with a grid of squares. Notice that five small squares on the paper form a larger square. The width of a single small square on ECG paper represents 0.04 seconds. To successfully interpret ECGs, you must have this value committed to memory.

Page 9: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Electrocardiogram (ECG)

• If each small square represents 0.04 seconds, then a second will be 25 small squares across. If you print out a minute's worth of your heart's electrical activity, the paper would be 1500 small squares wide. If something on an ECG is, let's say, 12 small squares in width, that means that it lasted 12 x 0.04, or almost half a second. A common length of an ECG printout is 6 seconds; this is known as a "six second strip."

Page 10: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Electrocardiogram Waves

• P-wave– Depolarization

(contraction) of atria.• QRS-wave

– Depolarization (contraction) of ventricle

• T-wave– Repolarization

(relaxation) of ventricles

Page 11: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Cardiac cycle

• Atrial systole - contracting atria forces blood into ventricle. P-wave of ECG

• Isovolumetric contraction - blood volume in ventricles remains constant. QRS-wave of ECG (1st heart sound)

• Ejection - blood ejected into pulmonary artery and aorta. T-wave

Page 12: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Cardiac cycle continued

• Isovolumetric relaxation - relaxation of ventricles (second heart sound)

• Rapid ventricular filling - return of venous blood

– Increases atrial pressure until av valves (tricuspid and bicuspid) open and blood rushes into ventricles.

• Reduced ventricular filling - increase in ventricular pressure and volume will slow blood filling.

Page 13: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Blood Pressure

• Sphygmomanometer - measures air pressure = to blood pressure

Page 14: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Blood Pressure

• Systolic pressure - 1st sound– blood pushing against artery

walls when ventricles contract.

• Diastolic pressure - 2nd sound– closing of valves, short sharp

sound

Page 15: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Directions for Taking Blood Pressure

• Pump pressure until no pulse is heard

• Release air until a spurt of blood is heard coming through. (systolic)

• Continue until sound stops (diastolic)

Page 16: PHYSIOLOGY OF THE HEART NOTES. Cardiac Conduction System SA node - (pacemaker) sinoatrial AV node – atrioventricular AV bundle

Video Clip

http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/anatomyvideos/000021.htmCardiac Conduction System

http://www.healthination.com/Conditions/Videos/Congestive-Heart-Failure/The-Failing-Hearthttp://www.healthination.com/topics.php?page=congestive_heart_failureCongestive Heart Failure

Heart AttackECG

http://www.sciencelearn.org.nz/Contexts/See-through-Body/Sci-Media/Animations-and-Interactives/Label-the-heartDrag and drop Tutorial