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Year 1
BI1BP2 - Pathology
Cardiovasucular
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Cards (104)
Where is the human heart located?
Just
beneath
the
breastbone
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What is the approximate size of the human heart?
About
twice
the size of a clenched
fist
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What is the average weight of the human heart in females?
250-300
g
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What is the average weight of the human heart in males?
300-350
g
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What is the primary composition of the human heart?
Mostly
cardiac
muscle (~
70
% of cardiac cell volume)
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How many chambers does the human heart have?
Four separate chambers
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What is the function of the human heart?
To
pump blood
around the body
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How much blood does the heart pump in a lifetime if it beats 72 bpm for a lifespan of 68.6 years?
189,800,000 litres
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What is the blood volume pumped per minute if the heart pumps at 0.073 l/min?
0.073
l/min
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What are the four chambers of the human heart and their functions?
Right atrium
: Receives blood from the body
Right ventricle
: Pumps blood to the lungs
Left atrium
: Receives blood from the lungs
Left ventricle
: Pumps blood to the body
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What is a ventricular septal defect?
A
gap
between the
left
and
right
ventricles allowing
blood
to
mix
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What is the prevalence of ventricular septal defects?
~
1/500
live births
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What is coarctation of the aorta?
A
narrowing
of part of the aorta that
increases
the
workload
on the
left
ventricle
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What is the prevalence of coarctation of the aorta?
~
1/1500
live births
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What are the four abnormalities associated with Tetralogy of Fallot?
1.
Narrowing
of the
pulmonary valve
2.
Thickening
of the
wall
of the
right ventricle
3.
Displacement
of the
aorta
over the
ventricular septal defect
4.
Ventricular septal defect
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What are the four heart valves and their functions?
Tricuspid
valve: Between right atrium and right ventricle
Pulmonary
valve: Between right ventricle and pulmonary artery
Aortic
valve: Between left ventricle and aorta
Mitral
(bicuspid) valve: Between left atrium and left ventricle
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What are the atrioventricular (AV) valves and their function?
They prevent
backflow
of blood between
atria
and
ventricles
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How do
semilunar valves
function?
They
open
when blood is pumped into
arteries
and
close
when
ventricles
relax
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What is the most common cardiac valvular anomaly?
Bicuspid aortic valve
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What can a cleft mitral valve cause?
Mitral valve
stenosis
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What is aortic stenosis and what can cause it?
Calcification
of valves caused by
rheumatic heart disease
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What are the effects of valve stenosis?
Stiff
valves
that do not close properly
Leaky
valves causing
backflow
of blood
Increased
workload on the heart
May require
heart
surgery
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What is the cardiac cycle?
1.
Relaxation
phase (diastole)
2.
Atrial
systole
3.
Ventricular
systole
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How long does one complete cardiac cycle take in an adult human at rest?
~
0.8
s
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What occurs during the relaxation phase of the cardiac cycle?
Atria and
ventricles
are in
diastole
and blood returns to the
heart
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What happens during atrial systole?
Atria
contract
and force
blood
into the
ventricles
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What occurs during ventricular systole?
Ventricles
contract
and pump
blood
into the
large arteries
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How do cardiac muscle cells contract?
They can contract
without
any signal from the
nervous system
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What is the role of the sinoatrial (SA) node?
It maintains the heart's
pumping rhythm
by setting the
contraction rate
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Where is the SA node located?
Within the wall of the right atrium
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What happens when the SA node generates electrical impulses?
Impulses spread through
atrial walls
causing them to
contract
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What is the function of the atrioventricular (AV) node?
It acts as a
relay
point between the
right
atrium and
right
ventricle
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Why is there a delay at the AV node?
To ensure
atria contract
first and
empty
completely before
ventricles contract
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What are
Purkinje fibres
responsible for?
Conducting the signal to
contract
throughout the walls of the
ventricle
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How is heart rate regulated?
SA node
sets the tempo
Influenced by various signals and
hormones
Body temperature affects
pacemaker
activity
Positive and negative chronotropic factors adjust
heart rate
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What is an electrocardiogram (
ECG
)?
A procedure that records
electrical impulses
during the
cardiac cycle
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What does the P wave in an ECG represent?
Impulses originating in the
SA node
and spreading into the
atria
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What does the
QRS
complex in an
ECG represent
?
Impulse spreading
from the
AV node
to the
ventricles
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What does the T wave in an ECG represent?
Repolarization
of the
ventricle prior
to the
next impulse
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What happens if the SA node does not work?
Artificial
pacemakers
can compensate for the
heart rate
View source
See all 104 cards
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