Cardiovascular System
Cardiovascular System
Cardiovascular System
The Heart
• Systemic circulation
• Location
• Blood flows from the left side of the heart
through the body tissues and back to the right side of the
• Thorax between the lungs in the inferior heart
mediastinum
• Pulmonary circulation
• Orientation
• Blood flows from the right side of the heart to the
• Pointed apex directed toward left hip lungs and back to the left side of the heart
• Base points toward right shoulder
The Heart: Valves
• About the size of your fist
• Allow blood to flow in only one direction to
The Heart: Coverings prevent backflow
• Visceral pericardium
• Tricuspid valve (right side of heart)
• Parietal pericardium
• Pulmonary semilunar valve
• Outside layer
• Semilunar valves
• Endothelium
• The heart has its own nourishing circulatory
system consisting of
The Heart: Chambers • Coronary arteries—branch from the aorta to
• Right and left side act as separate pumps supply the heart muscle with oxygenated blood
• Four chambers
• Cardiac veins—drain the myocardium of blood
• Atria
• Coronary sinus—a large vein on the posterior of
the heart, receives blood from cardiac veins
• Receiving chambers • Blood empties into the right atrium via the
• Right atrium coronary sinus
• Left atrium
The Heart: Associated Great Vessels • Force cardiac muscle depolarization in one
• Arteries direction—from atria to ventricles
• Aorta
Heart Contractions
• Leaves left ventricle
• Once SA node starts the heartbeat
• Pulmonary arteries
• Impulse spreads to the AV node
• Leave right ventricle
• Then the atria contract
• At the AV node, the impulse passes through the
AV bundle, bundle branches, and Purkinje fibers
The Heart: Associated Great Vessels • Blood is ejected from the ventricles to the aorta
• Veins and pulmonary trunk as the ventricles contract
• Superior and inferior venae cavae
Heart Contractions
• Enter right atrium • Homeostatic imbalance
• Pulmonary veins (four) • Heart block—damaged AV node releases them
• Enter left atrium from control of the SA node; result is in a slower heart
rate as ventricles contract at their own rate
Blood Flow Through the Heart • Ischemia—lack of adequate oxygen supply to
• Superior and inferior venae cavae dump blood heart muscle
into the right atrium • Fibrillation—a rapid, uncoordinated shuddering
• From right atrium, through the tricuspid valve, of the heart muscle
blood travels to the right ventricle
• Heart Contractions
From the right ventricle, blood leaves the heart
as it passes through the pulmonary semilunar valve into • Homeostatic imbalance (continued)
the pulmonary trunk • Tachycardia—rapid heart rate over 100 beats
• Pulmonary trunk splits into right and left per minute
pulmonary arteries that carry blood to the lungs • Bradycardia—slow heart rate less than 60 beats
per minutes
Blood Flow Through the Heart
• Oxygen is picked up and carbon dioxide is The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds
dropped off by blood in the lungs • Atria contract simultaneously
• Oxygen-rich blood returns to the heart through • Atria relax, then ventricles contract
the four pulmonary veins
• Blood enters the left atrium and travels through
• Systole = contraction
the bicuspid valve into the left ventricle • Diastole = relaxation
• From the left ventricle, blood leaves the heart via
The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds
the aortic semilunar valve and aorta
• Cardiac cycle—events of one complete heart
The Heart: Conduction System beat
• Intrinsic conduction system (nodal system) • Mid-to-late diastole
• Heart muscle cells contract, without nerve • Pressure in heart is low
impulses, in a regular, continuous way • Blood flows from passively into the atria and
into ventricles
The Heart: Conduction System
• Special tissue sets the pace
• Semilunar valves are closed
Heart Contractions
• Semilunar valves open as blood pushes against
them
• Contraction is initiated by the sinoatrial node (SA • Blood travels out of the ventricles through
node)
pulmonary trunk and aorta
• Sequential stimulation occurs at other • Atria are relaxed
autorhythmic cells
The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds • Arterioles
• Cardiac cycle—events of one complete heart • Exchanges between tissues and blood
beat
• Early diastole
• Capillary beds
Capillary Exchange
• Substances exchanged due to concentration
gradients
• Oxygen and nutrients leave the blood
• Carbon dioxide and other wastes leave the cells
Developmental Aspects of
the Cardiovascular System
• A simple “tube heart” develops in the embryo
and pumps by the fourth week
• The heart becomes a four-chambered organ by
the end of seven weeks
• Few structural changes occur after the seventh
week
Developmental Aspects of
the Cardiovascular System
• Aging problems associated with the
cardiovascular system include
• Venous valves weaken
• Varicose veins
• Progressive atherosclerosis
• Loss of elasticity of vessels leads to
hypertension