The Heart: 32 000 000 beats per year! Muscular organ located between lungs.

Post on 18-Jan-2016

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Transcript of The Heart: 32 000 000 beats per year! Muscular organ located between lungs.

The Heart:

32 000 000 beats per year!

Muscular organ located between lungs

structure

Composed of myocardium (cardiac muscle tissue)

Inside the heart is lined with endocardium (squamous epithelial)

Outside of heart is lined with pericardium which forms pericardial sac (for heart lubrication)

The heart is divided into two halves by the septum

Two halves of the heart are divided into 4 chambers

Blood flow through the heart is controlled by valves

The atrio-ventricular valves are held in place by chordae tendinae

The semi lunar valves direct flow out of the heart (resemble a half moon)

Function

The heart acts as a double pump The right side of the heart pumps blood to

the lungs (called the pulmonary circuit) The left side pumps blood to the rest of the

body (called systemic circuit) This is why the left side of the heart is

larger (has to pump blood farther)

Pathway of blood

Venae cavae (inferior and superior) to the right atrium

Right atrium to right ventricle Right ventricle to pulmonary artery (to

lungs/pulmonary veins and back to heart) Left atrium to left ventricle Left ventricle to aorta to the body

Systole – contraction: first atria contract, then ventricles

Diastole – relaxation Sound: lub-dupp Lub: atrioventricular valves close Dupp: closing of semi-lunar valves Heart murmur often due to ineffective

valves (hear a “slush” sound instead of “lub”) this can cause back-flow in the heart

Blood pressure

Average = 120/80 mm Hg

systole of left ventricle

diastole of left ventricle The ratio of the contraction and relaxations

Heart beat control

The heart beat is intrinsic, meaning it can beat independently of the central nervous system

The heart has its own pacemaker: the sino-atrial node

This is located in the upper dorsal wall of the right atrium

The SA node initiates the heart beat by causing the atria to contract

The electrical impulse then reaches the atrio-ventricular node located at the base of the right atrium

The signal is then transmitted through the ventricles by purkinje fibres

This then causes the ventricles to contract

The heart is controlled by the nervous system at the medulla oblongota (brain stem)

Heart beat is sped up or slowed down depending on what your body requires

Electrocardiogram (ECG) shows voltage changes across the heart during contraction