PHYSIOLOGY
OF THE HEART
The
work of the heart is to pump blood to the lungs through pulmonary
circulation and to the rest of the body through systemic circulation.
This is accomplished by systematic contraction and relaxation
of the cardiac muscle in the myocardium.
Heart
Beat
Diastole
The
relaxation of the cardiac muscle tissue in the ventricles is
called diastole. When the ventricles relax, they make room to
accept the blood from the atria. The decreased pressure due
to the relaxation of the ventricles is called diastolic pressure.
Systole
The
contraction of the cardiac muscle tissue in the ventricles is
called systole. When the ventricles contract, they force the
blood from their chambers into the arteries leaving the heart.
The left ventricle empties into the aorta and the right ventricle
into the pulmonary artery. The increased pressure due to the
contraction of the ventricles is called systolic pressure.
Conduction
System
An
effective cycle for productive pumping of blood requires that
the heart be synchronized accurately. Both atria need to contract
simultaneously, followed by contraction of both ventricles.
Specialized cardiac muscle cells that make up the conduction
system of the heart coordinate contraction of the chambers.
The conduction system includes several components. The first
part of the conduction system is the sinoatrial node . Without
any neural stimulation, the sinoatrial node rhythmically initiates
impulses 70 to 80 times per minute. Because it establishes the
basic rhythm of the heartbeat, it is called the pacemaker of
the heart. Other parts of the conduction system include the
atrioventricular node, atrioventricular bundle, bundle branches,
and conduction myofibers. All these components coordinate the
contraction and relaxation of the heart chambers.
Cardiac
Cycle
The
cardiac cycle refers to the alternating contraction and relaxation
of the myocardium in the walls of the heart chambers, coordinated
by the conduction system, during one heartbeat. Systole is the
contraction phase of the cardiac cycle, and diastole is the
relaxation phase. At a normal heart rate, one cardiac cycle
lasts for 0.8 second.
The
Cardiac Cycle consist of Five distinct phases:
Heart
Sounds
The
sounds associated with the heartbeat are due to vibrations in
the tissues and blood caused by closure of the valves. Abnormal
heart sounds are called murmurs.
Heart
Rate
The
sinoatrial node, acting alone, produces a constant rhythmic
heart rate. Regulating factors are reliant on the atrioventricular
node to increase or decrease the heart rate to adjust cardiac
output to meet the changing needs of the body. Most changes
in the heart rate are mediated through the cardiac center in
the medulla oblongata of the brain. The center has both sympathetic
and parasympathetic components that adjust the heart rate to
meet the changing needs of the body.
Peripheral
factors such as emotions, ion concentrations, and body temperature
may affect heart rate. These are usually mediated through the
cardiac center.