Heart Muscles, Valves & Blood Vessels (I)
Heart Muscles, Valves & Blood Vessels (I)
Heart Muscles, Valves & Blood Vessels (I)
Vessels (I)
Dr Gauhar Hussain
Assistant Professor of Physiology
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Objectives
1. Define the four specific characteristics of cardiac muscle and explain their
importance.
3. State the origin of the electrical activity of the heart and describe the
myogenic nature of the cardiac action potential, and the mechanism and
route of spread of electrical activity through myocardium.
4. Describe the ionic basis of each phase of the action potential, and the
characteristics of the action potential in different regions of the heart.
5. State the temporal relationship between mechanical and electrical events.
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Cardiac Muscle
• Involuntary, Striated
• Exhibit branching
1. Atrial muscle,
2. Ventricular syncytium
1. Excitability:
2. Rhythmicity
3. Conductivity:
Mechanical properties:
4. related to Contractility:
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Action potential in
different regions of the heart
• Variability in the shape of the action potential at each location.
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Ionic basis for excitability (Fast AP)
Depolarization: Phase 0: stimulation by an adequate stimulus causes
overshoot (1-2 ms) due to increased permeability to Na+ ions.
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Ionic basis for excitability (Fast AP)
Repolarization: {b} Plateau: Phase 2 (100-150 ms)
{a} Initial repolarization. Phase 1 (10 ms) • Ca2+ channels open and fast K +channels close.
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2. Rhythmicity (Automaticity)
Definition: It is the ability of the heart to initiate its own impulses (beat)
continuously and regularly independent of nervous connection.
It describes the origin of the electrical activity of the heart.
• The contraction of the heart is myogenic – meaning that the signal for
cardiac compression arises within the heart tissue itself.
• In other words, the signal for a heart beat is initiated by the heart muscle
cells (cardiomyocytes) rather than from brain signals.
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2. Rhythmicity (Automaticity)
Origin of the cardiac impulses:
initiated in the automatic cells/ Autorhythmic cells or nodal tissues :
SA node = (sinus rhythm) = 90-110/min., (highest rhythm = pacemaker)
AV node = (nodal rhythm)= 45- 60 / min.
Purkinje fiber = 30/min.
Ventricular muscle = 20 – 40/ min.
Idioventricular rhythm if SA node & AV node are damaged or inhibited by vagal stimulation.
develops a rhythmical discharge rate that is more rapid than that of the sinus node.
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Mechanism of Autorythmicity
Ionic basis for slow cardiac AP
Shows spontaneous pacemaker potential or
prepotential followed by spontaneous AP.
Stages of slow AP in automatic cells
Rapid depolarization:
0
When the potential reaches a threshold voltage of
3
about –40 millivolts, the L-type calcium channels 4
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Importance of Pacemaker potential or
Prepotential
1. It is the cause of rhythmicity (automaticity).
2. The rate of slope of prepotential determines the heart rate. The more is the slope, the more
will be the heart rate).
(i.e. the speed with which it is reached to the firing level determine the rate of the tissue
discharge.)
• Note-: Although SA nodal rhythm is more than 90 beat/min. yet the heart rate (as measured by
counting the radial pulsations) is only 70 beat/min.
• This is due to the effect of vagus nerve on rhythmicity of SA node decreasing it to about 70
beat/min (vagal tone).
• Caused by a very high level of permeability of the gap junctions at the intercalated discs
between the successive cells that make up the Purkinje fibers
• In only 0.03 second: cardiac impulse passes from the bundle branches in the ventricular
septum to the terminations of the Purkinje fibers
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Route of spread of electrical activity
through myocardium.
SA node
AV node
Bundle of His
Bundle Branches
Atrial pathways 1
AV node 0.05
Bundle of His 1
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Temporal relationship between mechanical
and electrical events.
Excitation-Contraction Coupling in Cardiac muscle
• Cardiac mechanical
contraction is triggered by
electrical activation via an
intracellular calcium-
dependent process known as
excitation–contraction
coupling
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Mechanical properties
(1) Contractility : It is the ability of the heart to pump blood against the peripheral
resistance.
(2) All or none law: “Stimuli causes the cardiac muscle to contracts maximally or not
at all, provided that all factors affecting contraction are kept constant”.
• This is because the cardiac muscle acts as a functional syncytium (as one unit).
• This is due to long absolute refractory period in the cardiac muscle during which its
excitability is completely lost.
• i.e. the greater the initial length of the cardiac muscle fiber, the stronger will be
the force of its contraction.
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Mechanical properties
(5) Force - velocity relationship : The velocity of contraction is inversely proportional to
afterload and directly proportional with preload.
• Pre-load: The load on muscle before it begins to contract. It means the force which stretch the
muscle fibers and increase its length before contraction.
• In the heart the preload is the amount of blood returns to the heart and fill the ventricle at
end of diastole (EDV=end diastolic volume ).
• After-load: the force which act on the muscle after its beginning of contraction and resist the
contraction and decreases its velocity.
• In the heart the increase in the mean aortic pressure opposes the contraction power of the
ventricle.
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Mechanical properties
(6) Force-frequency relationship
(i) Staircase (or treppe ) phenomenon :
• When the isolated heart is stimulated by successive maximal stimuli (constant), the force of
contraction increases gradually for the first few contractions and then it remains
the same.
• Explanation:
• 2. Increase in the warmth --> increases the rate of metabolic processes and chemical reactions.
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Mechanical properties
(6) Force-frequency relationship
(iii)-Beat loss:
Thank You
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