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Cardio Vascular System

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

• Heart lies in the thoracic cavity in the


mediastinum between the lungs, lies Obliquely, a
little more to the left than right.
• It presents a base above and an apex below.
• Apex is about 9cm to the left of the midline
&points inferiosinister (down and left) , little
below to nipple and slightly nearer to the midline
– 5th intercostal space,
Contd…….
• Base is superior near origins of great vessels
– 2nd intercostal space
• 2/3 lies left of the midline
• For the most part
– Anterior/inferior aspect of the heart
• right atrium/ventricle
– Posterior/superior aspect
• left atrium/ventricle
• Heart pumps over 1 million gallons per year
• Over 60,000 miles of blood vessels
Heart’s position in thorax

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

• Heart is composed of three layers of tissue

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

• This forms the lining of the myocardium and


heart valves.
• It is a thin , smooth, glistening membrane
which permits the smooth flow of blood inside
the heart.
• It consists of flattened epithelium that lines
the blood vessels.
Surface anatomy
• Sulci - grooves on
surface of heart
containing coronary
blood vessels and fat
– coronary sulcus
• encircles heart and
marks the boundary
between the atria and the
ventricles
– anterior interventricular
sulcus
• marks the boundary
between the ventricles
anteriorly
Posterior view
Break
Interior To Heart
Chambers of the heart
sides are labeled in reference to the patient facing you

• Two atria
– Right atrium
– Left atrium
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

• Two ventricles
– Right ventricle
– Left ventricle

23
Right Atrium Right Ventricle

• Receives blood from 3


sources • Forms most of anterior surface of
– superior vena cava, inferior heart
vena cava and coronary • Papillary muscles are cone
sinus shaped trabeculae carneae
• Interatrial septum partitions (raised bundles of cardiac
the atria muscle)
• Fossa ovalis is a remnant of • Chordae tendineae: cords
the fetal foramen ovale between valve cusps and
• Tricuspid valve papillary muscles
– Blood flows through into •
right ventricle Interventricular septum:
– has three cusps composed partitions ventricles
of dense CT covered by • Pulmonary semilunar valve:
endocardium blood flows into pulmonary trunk
20-24
Left Atrium Left Ventricle

• • Forms the apex of heart


Forms most of the base of the heart
• Receives blood from lungs - 4 pulmonary • Chordae tendineae anchor
veins (2 right + 2 left) bicuspid valve to papillary
• Bicuspid valve: blood passes through muscles (also has trabeculae
into left ventricle carneae like right ventricle)
– has two cusps • Aortic semilunar valve:
– to remember names of this valve, try – blood passes through valve
the pneumonic LAMB into the ascending aorta
• Left Atrioventricular, Mitral, or – just above valve are the
Bicuspid valve
openings to the coronary
arteries 20-25
Valves
three tricuspid
one bicuspid (cusp means flap)

• “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

• A-V valves open and allow blood to flow


from atria into ventricles when
ventricular pressure is lower than atrial
pressure
– occurs when ventricles are relaxed,
chordae tendineae are slack and
papillary muscles are relaxed
• A-V valves close preventing backflow of
blood into atria
– occurs when ventricles contract, pushing valve
cusps closed, chordae tendinae are pulled taut and
papillary muscles contract to pull cords and prevent
cusps from everting
20-31
Interatrial septum

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 semilunar valve)

Pulmonary Arteries

Lungs
Pulmonary Veins

Left Atrium

bicuspid (mitral) valve

Body Aorta (aortic semilunar valve) Left Ventricle


20-44
The each heartbeat = cardiac cycle
Heartbeat -SL valves close
“dup”
-AV valves open
-filling of atria &
ventricles begins

-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

(Explanation in next slides)


46
Conduction system

• 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

• SA node through AV bundle (bundle of His)


– Into interventricular septum
– Divides
R and L bundle branches
become subendocardial
branches (“Purkinje
fibers”)
• Contraction begins
at apex

48
49
Thank You

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