force generation by the heart Flashcards

1
Q

what is the structure of a cardiac muscle?

A
  • the cardiac muscle is striated - caused by regular arrangement of contractile protein
  • no neuromuscular junctions
  • cardiac myocytes are electrically coupled by gap junctions - these are protein channels which form low resistance electrical communication pathways between neighbouring myocytes, these ensure each electrical excitation reaches all cardiac myocytes
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2
Q

what do the desmosomes within intercalated discs do?

A
  • they provide mechanical adhesion between adjacent cardiac cells
  • ensure that the tension developed by one cell is transmitted to the next
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3
Q

what is the structure of a striated muscle fibre?

A
  • myofibrils are contained in each muscle fibre - these are the contractile units of muscle
  • they myofibrils have alternating segments of thick and thin protein filaments
  • the actin (thin) causes lighter appearance
  • within each myofibril, actin and myosin are arranged into sacromeres
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4
Q

how is the muscle tension produced?

A
  • by the slidin of actin filaments on myosin filaments - the sliding filament theory
  • force generation depends upon ATP - dependent interaction between myosin and actin
  • Ca+ is required to switch on cross bridge formation
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5
Q

how does action potential switch on cardiac concentration?

A
  • Muscle fiber relaxed; no cross-bridge binding because the cross-bridge binding site on actin is physically covered by the troponin-
    tropomyosin complex
  • Muscle fiber excited; Ca2+ binds with troponin, pulling troponin-tropomyosin complex aside to expose cross-bridge binding site; cross-bridge binding occurs
  • Binding of actin and myosin cross
    bridge triggers power stroke that pulls
    thin filament inward during contraction
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6
Q

what is the refractory period?

A

a period following an action potential in which it is not possible to produce another action potential

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7
Q

what is the importance of a long refractory period to the normal cardiac function?

A
  • during the plateau phase of ventricular action potential, the Na+ channels are in the depolarised closed state so are not available for opening
  • during the descending phase, the K+ channels are open and the membrane cant be depolarised
  • the long RP is protective for the heart preventing generation of tetanic contractions in the cardiac muscle
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8
Q

what is stroke volume?

A
  • the volume of blood ejected by each ventricle per heart beat
  • SV = end diastolic volume - end systolic volume
    = volume at end of diastolation (maximum volume)
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9
Q

how is stroke volume regulated?

A
  • by intrinsic (within heart) and extrinsic (nervous and hormonal control) mechanisms
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10
Q

what is the intrinsic control of stroke volume?

A
  • changes in SV are beough about by changed in the diastolic length/stretch of myocardial fibres
  • this is determined by the end diastolic volume
  • EDV determines the cardaic preload (length/stretch)
  • EDV is determined by the venous return to the heart
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11
Q

what is the frank-starling curve?

A
  • it describes the relationship between venous return, EDV and SV
  • “the more the ventricle is filled with blood during diastole (EDV), the greater the volume of ejected blood will be during the resulting systolic contraction (SV)
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12
Q

how does starling’s law match the SV or RV and LV?

A
  • if venous return to the RA increases, EDV of EV increases
  • the lae leads to increased SV into pulmonary artery
  • venous return to the LA from the pulmonary vein increases, EDV of LV increases
  • the law leads to increased SV into aorta
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13
Q

what is afterload? what is extra load?

A
  • the resistance into which the heart is pumping
  • ## the extra load imposed after the heart has contracted
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14
Q

what happens if the after load is increased?

A
  • at first, heart unable to eject the full SV, so EDV increases
  • force by contraction rises by the law
  • if increased afterload continues to exist, eventually the ventricular muscle mass increases to overcome the resistance
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15
Q

what is extrinsic control of stroke volume?

A
  • eg hormones and nerves
  • the ventricular muscle is supplied by sympathetic nerve fibres
  • neurotransmitter = noradrenaline
  • stimulation of sympa nerves increases the force of contraction = known as a positive inotropic effect
  • (stimulation of sympathetic nerve to the heart also causes a positive chronotropic effects ie the heart rate increases)
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16
Q

what is the effect of sympathetic stimulation on ventricular contraction?

A
  • force of contraction increases (Ca+ influx increases)
  • the effect is cAMP mediated
  • the peak ventricular pressure rises
  • rate of pressure change during systole increases
  • rate of ventricular relaxation increases (increased rate of Ca+ pumping)
  • this reduced the duration of diastole
17
Q

when is the starling curve shifted to the left?

A
  • as a result of sympathetic nerve stimulation on ventricular contraction
  • peak ventricular pressure rises - contractility of heart at a given EDV rises
18
Q

when does the heart failure curve shift to the right?

A
  • as a result of positive and negative inotropic agents on ventricular contraction
19
Q

what is the effect of parasympathetic nerves on ventricular contraction?

A
  • very little innervation of ventricles by vagus in man, no effect on SV
  • vagal stimulation have major influence on rate, not force, of contraction
20
Q

what is the extrinsic control of SV?

A
  • Adrenaline and noradrenaline released from adrenal medulla have inotropic and chronotropic effect
  • Effects normally minor c.f. effects of noradrenaline from sympathetic nerves
21
Q

what is cardiac output?

A
  • The volume of blood pumped by each ventricle per minute is known as the Cardiac Output (CO)
  • CO = SV x HR