Care of Clients With Problems in Oxygenation
Care of Clients With Problems in Oxygenation
Care of Clients With Problems in Oxygenation
CARE OF CLIENTS WITH PROBLEMS IN ventricular) – to allow complete ventricular Left ventricle -2 to 3x more muscular than
OXYGENATION filling prior to ejection right (must overcome high aortic and arterial
A. CARDIOVASCUCULAR SYSTEM Right side – receives deoxygenated blood via pressure)
a. Basic Anatomy and Physiology pulmonary artery (only artery that carries
HEART deoxygenated blood) for oxygenation
Hollow, muscular organ **pulmonary circulation
Occupies mediastinum, rests on diaphragm o Right atrium – receives venous blood
300 g from superior + inferior vena cava +
Pumps blood to tissues, oxygen & nutrient coronary sinus
supply Left side – distributes oxygenated blood via
3 layers: aorta **systemic circulation
(1) endocardium – inner layer, endothelial o Left atrium – receives oxygenated
tissue, lines inside of heart and valves blood via 4 pulmonary veins
(2) myocardium – middle, muscle fibers,
pumping action
(3) epicardium – outer layer, thin fibrous sac, HEART VALVES
composed of 2 layers Permit blood to flow in one direction; prevent
i. visceral epicardium – adheres to the backflow
epicardium Atrioventricular – tricuspid + bicuspid
ii. parietal epicardium – tough, fibrous (mitral)
tissue, attaches to great vessels, o During diastole – open
diaphragm, sternum, vertebral column;
o systole – close; papillary muscles +
supports heart in mediastinum
chordae tendineae maintain closure
pericardial space – lubrication, reduce
Semilunar – pulmonic + aortic
friction
o Diastole – closed
HEART CHAMBERS
o Systole – open as blood is ejected to
Atria + ventricles
pulmonary artery & aorta respectively
Diastole – relaxation phase; 4 chambers relax
Ventricular walls are much thicker than atrial CORONARY ARTERIES
simultaneously; ventricular filling
walls bec they must overcome resistance to Supply arterial blood
Systole – contraction phase; atrial +
blood flow from pulmonary and systemic Originate from aorta
ventricular contraction; not simultaneous
(atrial contraction first, followed by circulation respectively Heart extracts 70-80% of oxygen delivered
(others – 25%)
2|MEDICAL-SURGICAL NURSING I