Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Week #5 (4/18-4/20) Warm Up – Mon, 4/18: - Finish Pig Dissections Have out:  1 piece of paper with Name, Per & Date labeled “How to take Blood Pressure”

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Week #5 (4/18-4/20) Warm Up – Mon, 4/18: - Finish Pig Dissections Have out:  1 piece of paper with Name, Per & Date labeled “How to take Blood Pressure”"— Presentation transcript:

1 Week #5 (4/18-4/20) Warm Up – Mon, 4/18: - Finish Pig Dissections Have out:  1 piece of paper with Name, Per & Date labeled “How to take Blood Pressure” Pick up:  Cardiac Output, Blood Pressure & Pulse notes Agenda: 1.Cardiac Output, Blood Pressure & Pulse notes 2.How to Take Blood Pressure Homework: 1.Pig Heart Dissection Lab Abstract (3D) – Mon, 4/25 2.Heart/Circulation Quiz –Fri, 4/22 (Earth Day!) Anatomy Fun Fact: In 1929, German surgeon Werner Forssmann (1904- 1979) examined the inside of his own heart by threading a catheter into his arm vein & pushing it 20 inches into his heart, inventing cardiac catheterization, a now common procedure.

2 How Does the Heart Know to Beat? Heart Conduction System

3 The Heart: Conduction System Intrinsic conduction system (nodal system) Heart muscle cells contract, without nerve impulses, in a regular, continuous way Special tissue sets pace Sinoatrial node = SA node (“pacemaker”), is in R atrium Atrioventricular node = AV node, is at junction of atria & ventricles Atrioventricular bundle = AV bundle (bundle of His), is in interventricular septum Bundle branches are in interventricular septum Purkinje fibers spread within ventricle wall muscles

4 Heart Contractions Contraction is initiated by the sinoatrial node (SA node) Sequential stimulation occurs at other autorhythmic cells (pacemaker cells) Force cardiac muscle depolarization in 1 direction—from atria to ventricles Once SA node starts the heartbeat Impulse spreads to AV node Then atria contract At AV node, the impulse passes through the AV bundle, bundle branches & Purkinje fibers Blood is ejected from ventricles to aorta & pulmonary trunk as ventricles contract

5 The Cardiovascular System Pulse, Blood Pressure & Cardiac Output

6 Pulse (Heart Rate)  Pulse  Pressure wave of blood  Monitored at “pressure points” in arteries where pulse is easily palpated  Pulse averages 70–76 beats/min at rest  Also known as “heart rate”

7 Regulation of Heart Rate  Increased heart rate  Sympathetic NS  Crisis  Low blood pressure  Hormones  Epinephrine  Thyroxine  Exercise  Decreased blood volume  Decreased heart rate  Parasympathetic NS  High blood pressure or blood volume  Decreased venous return

8 Variations in Heart Rate  Tachycardia— rapid heart rate  “tach” - swift over 100 beats/min  Bradycardia— slow heart rate  “brady(s)” - slow less than 60 beats/min

9 The Heart: Cardiac Cycle  Atria contract simultaneously  Atria relax, then ventricles contract  Systole = contraction  Ventricles contract, pushing blood out  Diastole = relaxation  Atria refilling with blood  Blood flowing from atria into ventricles

10 Blood Pressure  Measurements by health professionals are made on the pressure in large arteries  Systolic—pressure at peak of ventricular contraction  Diastolic—pressure when ventricles relax  1 st - systolic  2 nd - diastolic  Ex: 120/80 mm Hg  Pressure in blood vessels decreases as distance from heart increases…WHY? Comparison of Blood Pressures in Different Vessels Blood Pressure videoBlood Pressure video ~ 2 mins.

11 Measuring Arterial Blood Pressure Figure 11.20a How to Take Blood Pressure

12 Blood Pressure Variations  Blood pressure  Affected by age, weight, time of day, exercise, body position, emotional state  Normal human range is variable  Normal  140–110 mm Hg systolic  80–75 mm Hg diastolic  Hypotension  Low systolic (below 110 mm HG)  Often associated with illness  Hypertension  High systolic (above 140 mm HG)  Can be dangerous if it is chronic

13 Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors  Neural factors  Autonomic NS adjustments (sympathetic division)  Renal (kidney) factors  Regulation by altering blood volume  Renin—hormonal control  Temperature  Heat has a vasodilating effect  Cold has a vasoconstricting effect  Chemicals/drugs  Various substances can cause increases or decreases  Diet

14 Factors Determining Blood Pressure Figure 11.21

15 Week #5 (4/18-4/20) Warm Up – Mon, 4/18: - Finish Pig Dissections Have out:  1 piece of paper with Name, Per & Date labeled “How to take Blood Pressure” Pick up:  Cardiac Output, Blood Pressure & Pulse notes Agenda: 1.Finish Cardiac Output, Blood Pressure & Pulse notes 2.Heart/Circulation Quiz 3.Work on Final Exam Homework: 1.Pig Heart Dissection Lab Abstract (3D) – Mon, 4/25 2.Heart/Circulation Quiz –Today (Earth Day!) Anatomy Fun Fact: In 1929, German surgeon Werner Forssmann (1904- 1979) examined the inside of his own heart by threading a catheter into his arm vein & pushing it 20 inches into his heart, inventing cardiac catheterization, a now common procedure.

16 The Heart: Cardiac Output  Cardiac output (CO)  Amount of blood pumped by each ventricle of heart in 1 min  Heart rate (HR)/pulse  ~75 beats/min  Starling’s law of the heart—the more the cardiac muscle is stretched, the stronger the contraction  Changing HR is most common way to change CO

17 Cardiac Output Regulation Figure 11.8

18 The Heart – Blood Pressure Active Reading Read QUIETLY through the passage on blood pressure. Answer the 2 short answer questions in COMPLETE SENTENCES & the multiple choice question based on what you read. When finished, turn your wkst in.


Download ppt "Week #5 (4/18-4/20) Warm Up – Mon, 4/18: - Finish Pig Dissections Have out:  1 piece of paper with Name, Per & Date labeled “How to take Blood Pressure”"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google