2cardiovascularsystem 221117140330 Ef0fefc6
2cardiovascularsystem 221117140330 Ef0fefc6
2cardiovascularsystem 221117140330 Ef0fefc6
Mr. Ramar G
Professor
Hind College of Nursing
Lucknow.
Introduction
• A closed system of the heart and blood vessels
• The cardio vascular system is divided for
descriptive purposes into two.
– The Circulatory System: consists of heart & blood
vessels
– The Lymphatic System: consists of lymph nodes &
Lymph vessels
– The function of the cardiovascular system is to deliver
oxygen and nutrients and to remove carbon dioxide
and other waste products
The Heart
The heart=a muscular double pump with 2 functions
Overview
• The right side receives
oxygen-poor blood from the
body and tissues and then
pumps it to the lungs to pick
up oxygen and dispel carbon
dioxide
• Its left side receives
oxygenated blood returning
from the lungs and pumps this
blood throughout the body to
supply oxygen and nutrients
to the body tissues
The Heart
• The heart is a conical hollow muscular
organ situated in the middle mediastinum.
• It is enclosed within the pericardium
• It pumps blood to the various parts of the
body.
• The Greek name for the heart is cardia &
the Latin name is coronary
Heart : Measurements
• Heart measures 12x9cm and is about the size
of the owner’s fist.
• It weighs about 300 g in males and 250 g in
females
Facts, Location, & Orientation
9
Organs associated
• Inferiorly: the apex rests on the central tendon of
the diaphragm
• Superiorly: the great blood vessels
• Posteriorly: the esophagus, trachea, left and right
bronchus, descending aorta, inferior vena cava
and thoracic vertebrae.
• Laterally: lungs
• Anteriorly: the sternum, ribs and inter costal
muscles
Location & Associations
Figure 18.1
12
Break
Structure
1. Pericardium
2. Myocardium
3. Endocardium
Pericardium
• Pericardium is made of two sacs. The outer sac consists
of fibrous tissue and the inner is of a continuous double
layer of serous membrane.
• Fibrous pericardium
– dense irregular CT
– protects and anchors the heart, prevents
overstretching
• Serous pericardium
– thin delicate membrane contains
• parietal layer-outer layer
• pericardial cavity with pericardial fluid
• visceral layer (epicardium)
Pericardium
Myocardium
• It is composed of specialized
cardiac muscle found only in
the heart.
• It is under involuntary
control.
• Cross stripes are seen in
microscopic examination.
• Myocardium is thickest at
the apex and thins out
towards base. It is thickest in
the left ventricle.
Endocardium
• Two atria
– Right atrium
– Left atrium
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
• Two ventricles
– Right ventricle
– Left ventricle
23
Right Atrium Right Ventricle
• “Tricuspid” valve
– RA to RV
• Pulmonary or pulmonic valve
– RV to pulmonary trunk (branches R and L)
• Mitral valve (the bicuspid one)
– LA to LV
• Aortic valve
– LV to aorta
28
Function of AV valves
29
Function of semilunar valves
(Aortic and pulmonic valves)
30
Valves • Semilunar valves open with
ventricular contraction
– allow blood to flow
into pulmonary trunk
and aorta
• SL valves close with
ventricular relaxation
– prevents blood from
returning to ventricles,
blood fills valve cusps,
tightly closing the SL
valves
Right atrium
Tricuspid AV valve
Semilunar Valve
(aortic)
Chordae tendinae
Semilunar Valve
Papillary
(pulmonary)
muscle
20-32
Break
Blood Supply
Right coronary blood supply
• Right coronary artery
– Originates from ostia in right aortic sinus
• Superior to right aortic cusp
– Travels in right coronary (AV) sulcus
– Branches
• Right marginal arteries (acute marginal aa)
• Posterior interventricular a. (in post. IV sulcus)
• Sinoatrial nodal a.
• Atrioventricular nodal a.
Left coronary blood supply
• Left coronary artery
– Originates from ostia in left aortic sinus
• Superior to left aortic cusp
– Branches
• Left anterior descending (LAD) or anterior
interventricular a. (lies in anterior IV sulcus)
– Septal branches.
– Diagonal branches
• Left marginal aa. (Obtuse marginal aa.)
• Left circumflex a.
Venous drainage of the heart
• Coronary sinus
– Lies in coronary (AV) sulcus on posterior
– Opens directly to right atrium
– All venous drainage of the heart eventually flows here
• Great cardiac vein
– With LAD in anterior IV sulcus
• Left marginal vein
• Middle cardiac vein
– With posterior interventricular a.
• Small cardiac vein
– With right coronary a.
• Right marginal vein
• Oblique vein (LA)
• Posterior vein of the left ventricle
Blood Circulation
• Systemic circulation
– left side of heart pumps blood through body
– left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood into aorta
– aorta branches into many arteries that travel to organs
– arteries branch into many arterioles in tissue
– arterioles branch into thin-walled capillaries for exchange of gases and
nutrients
– deoxygenated blood begins its return in venules
– venules merge into veins and return to right atrium
• Pulmonary circulation
– right side of heart pumps deoxygenated blood to lungs
– right ventricle pumps blood to pulmonary trunk
– pulmonary trunk branches into pulmonary arteries
– pulmonary arteries carry blood to lungs for exchange of gases
– oxygenated blood returns to heart in pulmonary veins
20-41
Blood Circulation
• Blood flow
– blue = deoxygenated
– red = oxygenated
20-43
Passage of Blood through the Heart
Body
SVC/IVC Right Atrium (tricuspid valve) Right Ventricle
Pulmonary Arteries
Lungs
Pulmonary Veins
Left Atrium
-contraction of
atria
-AV valves open
-filling of -contraction of ventricles
ventricles = -AV valves close “lub”
“Ventricular -SL valves open
Filling stage” -blood to lungs and body
**Heart Murmur**
20-45
Electrical conduction system:
specialized cardiac muscle cells that carry
impulses throughout the heart musculature,
signaling the chambers to contract in the
proper sequence
• SA node (sinoatrial)
– In wall of RA
– Sets basic rate: 70-80
– Is the normal pacemaker
• Impulse from SA to atria
• Impulse also to AV node via internodal
pathway
• AV node
– In interatrial septum
47
Conduction continued
48
49
Thank You