Deoxygenated blood from the body in the right side of the heart is pumped to the lungs
Oxygenated blood from the lungs returns the left side of the heart
Systemic circulation
Oxygenated blood in the left side of the heart travels around the body
Deoxygenated blood from the body returns to the heart in the right side of the heart
Name the 4 chambers
Right atrium
Left atrium
Right ventricle
Left ventricle
Describe the pathway of deoxygenated blood
Deoxygenated blood from the body enters the right atrium via the vena cava
Passes through the tricuspid valve into the right ventricle
Ventricle contacts pushing blood out of the heart towards the lungs through the pulmonary artery through the pulmonary/semilunar valve
Describe the pathway of oxygenated blood
Oxygenated blood from the lungs enters the rleft atrium via the pulmonary vein
Passes through the bicuspid valve into the left ventricle
Ventricle contacts pushing blood out of the heart towards the rest of the body through the aorta through the aortic/semilunar valve
Arteries carry oxygenated blood AWAY from the heart at high pressure.
Artery adaptations
Thick muscular walls with elastic fibres to withstand the high pressure
Have a narrow lumen
Capillaries are 1 cell thick an have leaky walls to allow the exchange of substance between the cells and the blood
Capillary adaptations
1 cell thick to reduce the diffusion distance
Leaky walls
A have narrow lumen to slow blood flow and increase the time for exchange
Veins carry blood towards the heart at low pressure
Vein adaptations
Thinner muscular walls and less elastic fibres due to low pressure
Wider lumen to maintain blood flow
Valves to prevent backflow
Faulty valves
Varicose veins
Closed circulatory system
Blood goes within blood vessels
Open circulatory system
Blood bathes cells directly, no blood vessels
Systole
Contraction
Diastole
Relaxation
SAN
Sinoatrial node
AVN
Atrioventricular node
Name the 3 parts of the cardiac cycle
Cardiac diastole
Atrial systole
Ventricular systole
The heart is myogenic which means that contractions are initiated from within the heart without interaction with the nervous system
Cardiac diastole is when the atria and ventricles are both at rest. Blood is at low pressure in the veins. Pressure increases as the atria begin to fill. Some blood trickles through the open atrioventricular valves into the relaxed ventricles.
Atria systole is when pressure in the atria is the highest causing the atria walls to contract and push blood into the ventricles. Pressure in the ventricles begins to increases as they fill.
Ventricular systole is when the pressure in the ventricles is the highest which causes the ventirlces to contract from the apex upwards, pushing blood aout of the heart through the aorta and pulmonary artery. Ventricular pressure increases more than the atria causing the atrioventricluar valves to shut to prevent backflow. The pressure causes the semilunar valves to open.
How is the heart beat controlled?
SAN starts waves of depolarisation which spread to the atria causing them to contract (atrial systole)
There is a of non conductive layer of tissue between the atria and ventricles which has a high electrical resistance. This prevents the ventricles and atria from contracting at the same time.
AVN delays impulses by 0.1 seconds
AVN passes the waves of excitation down the bundle of His and up the Purkinje fibres in the interventricular septum.
This causes the ventricles to contract from the apex upwards, pushing blood out of the heart.
The SAN is found in the upper right atrium and is known as the pacemaker.
What is a red blood cell called?
Erythrocyte
What is a white blood cell called?
Leucocyte
What is are platelets called?
Thrombocytes
ECG
Electrocardiogram
What does an ECG do?
Measures the electrical signals of the heart on a trace to shows the hearts activity.
Name the 3 parts of an ECG
P wave
QRS complex
T wave
P wave
Shows atrial systole/depolarisation where the atria are contracting
QRScomplex
Shows ventricular systole/depolarisation where the ventricles are contracting
T Wave
Shows ventricular diastole/repolarisation where the ventricles are relaxing
Sinus
Normal heart rhythm which a rate of 60-100 beats per minute
Arrhythmia
Any deviations causing an irregular heart rhythm
Bradycardia
Abnormally slow heart rhythm with <60 beats per minute
Tachycardia
Abnormally fast heart rhythm with >100 beats per minute