heart prepared by dr f.nikbakht assistant professor of medical school

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Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

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Page 1: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

HeartPrepared by Dr F.NikbakhtAssistant professor of Medical school

Page 2: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Cardiac muscle

Page 3: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Cardiac Muscle

Page 4: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school
Page 5: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Sinus node and the Purkinje system of the heart, showing also the A-V node, atrial internodal pathways, and ventricular bundle branches

Page 6: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Organization of the A-V node. The numbers represent the interval of time from the origin of the impulse in the sinus node. The values have been extrapolated

to human beings .

Page 7: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Transmission of the cardiac impulse through the heart, showing the time of appearance (in fractions of a second after initial appearance at the sinoatrial

node) in different parts of the heart .

Page 8: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Rhythmical action potentials (in millivolts) from a Purkinje fiber and from a ventricular muscle fiber, recorded by means of microelectrodes

Page 9: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Rhythmical discharge of a sinus nodal fiber. Also, the sinus nodal action potential is compared with that of a ventricular muscle fiber .

Page 10: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Force of ventricular heart muscle contraction, showing also duration of the

refractory period and relative refractory period, plus the effect of premature

contraction. Note that premature contractions do not cause wave summation, as

occurs in skeletal muscle.

Page 11: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school
Page 12: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Denervated HeartHeart Rate ~100/min (Intrinsic Heart Rate)

Parasympathetic Nervous System)PNS: Vagus Nerve(

Could Decrease HR to Zero (Cardiac Arrest)

Sympathetic Nervous System)SNS: Cardiac Nerves(

Could Increase HR by 300%

Normal HR (~72/min) Is dominated by PNS

Page 13: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Parasympathetic NS,Inhibits cardiac APs

Sympathetic NS stimulates cardiac APs

Page 14: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Vagal Nerve Terminals

Neurotransmitter = Acetylcholine

Muscarinic Receptors

K Channels

Hyperpolarization

Longer time to reach threshold (Slower Heart Rate)

Page 15: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Sympathetic Nerve Terminals

Neurotransmitter = Norepinephrine

Beta-adrenergic Receptors

Leak Na Channels

Faster Rate of Spontaneous Depolarization

Faster to reach threshold (Faste Heart Rate)

Page 16: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Conducting System of Heart

Page 17: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school
Page 18: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Cardiac CycleHeart is two pumps that work together,

right and left halfRepetitive contraction (systole) and

relaxation (diastole) of heart chambersBlood moves through circulatory system

from areas of higher to lower pressure.Contraction of heart produces the pressure

Page 19: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

The cardiac cycleThe cardiac cycle

Page 20: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Cardiac cycle

Page 21: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Ejection Fraction = Stroke Volume/End-Diastolic Volume

Ejection Fraction is a measure of cardiac contractility

Page 22: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

The pressure-volume loop

Page 23: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school
Page 24: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Heart SoundsFirst heart sound or “lubb”

Atrioventricular valves and surrounding fluid vibrations as valves close at beginning of ventricular systole

Second heart sound or “dupp”Results from closure of aortic and pulmonary semilunar valves at beginning of ventricular diastole, lasts longer

Third heart sound (occasional)Caused by turbulent blood flow into ventricles and detected near end of first one-third of diastole

Page 25: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Sound Origin

1st sound Closure of mitral and tricuspid valves

2nd sound Closure of aortic and pulmonary valves

3rd sound Rapid ventricular filling in early diastole

4th sound Ventricular filling due to atrial contraction

Page 26: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Regulation of stroke volume & heart rate

Measurement of cardiac outputRegulation of heart rate

neuralRegulation of stroke volume

PreloadAfterloadNeural

Control of cardiac output

Page 27: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Sympathetic nervous system–sympathetic nerves release norepinephrine–plus circulating epinephrine from adrenal

medulla–both act on ß-receptors on sinoatrial node–increases slope of the pacemaker potential –increases heart rate = tachycardia

+25

0

-25

-50

-75

mV

Page 28: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Parasympathetic nervous system–vagus releases ACh –acts on muscarinic receptors on sinoatrial

node–hyperpolarises cells and decreases slope of

pacemaker potential–decreases heart rate = bradycardia

+25

0

-25

-50

-75

mV

Page 29: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Regulation of stroke volume - preload

Starlings Law states - the energy of contraction is proportional to the initial length of the cardiac

muscle fibre

Length

Ten

sion

=)preload(

Page 30: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Regulation of stroke volume - preload

In vivo, preload is affected by the End Diastolic Volume

End Diastolic Volume

Str

oke

Volu

me

Increased venous return, increases EDV, and therefore increases stroke volume = self-

regulation

Resting EDV

Page 31: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Regulation of stroke volume - afterload

Afterload is the load against which the muscle tries to contract

In vivo, afterload is set by the arterial pressure against which the blood is expelled (this in turn

depends on the Total Peripheral Resistance)If TPR increases, stroke volume will go down

Page 32: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Regulation of stroke volume - neural

End Diastolic Volume

Str

oke

Volu

me +sympathetic stimulation

Page 33: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school

Control of cardiac outputHR increases

via decrease vagal tone & increased sympathetic tone

Contractility increases via increased sympathetic tone alters inotropic state & shortens systole

Venous return increases via venoconstriction & skeletal/respiratory pumps maintains preload

Total peripheral resistance falls due to arteriolar dilation in muscle, skin & heart reduces afterload

CO increase 4-6 times

HR x SV = CO

Page 34: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school
Page 35: Heart Prepared by Dr F.Nikbakht Assistant professor of Medical school