Cardiac Anatomy and Physiology: Leaugeay Webre BS, CCEMT-P, Nremt-P
Cardiac Anatomy and Physiology: Leaugeay Webre BS, CCEMT-P, Nremt-P
Objectives
Describe the size, shape, location, and
orientation of the heart.
Describe the normal anatomy of the heart
and peripheral circulatory system.
Name and describe the location of the
cardiac valves.
Between Lungs
Mediastinum
Base - 2nd intercostal
Apex - left &
downward
Apex & right ventricle
rest on diaphragm
Posteriorly
10-12 cm long
9 cm wide
6 cm thick
Weighs 300 grams
Size of owners fist
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Anatomy of
the Heart
Location and
Size of the
Heart
Organ Membrane
Pericardium - Double Sac (2)
Visceral - inner, serous layer (epicardium)
Parietal - (outer) attached to pleura &
diaphragm
Heart Wall
Myocardium
lined inside by endocardium
folding of endocardium form valves
endocardial lining is continuous w/the lining or
arteries, carpillaries & veins
specialized muscle cells found only in heart
muscle fibers 1/3 smaller than others
very dependant on calcium for contraction
Myocardium
Muscular layer of ventricle wall contain
myofibrils composed of:
actin
myosin
Ability to contract
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Tissue Layers
Endocardium
Myocardium
Pericardium
Visceral
Pericardium
Parietal
Pericardium
Pericardial
Fluid
Heart Chambers
Atria
right and left
less muscular
Ventricles
right and left
more muscular
Heart Chambers
Septum
interatrial
intraventricular
both: connective tissue and muscle
Heart Valves
Atrioventricular (AV)
Valves
Tricuspid - 3 flaps
Bicuspids - 2 cusps
both are anchored by
Chordae Tendineae to
papillary muscles of
ventricles
Semilunar valves
Pulmonary - proximal
end of pulmonary
artery
aortic valve - proximal
end of aorta
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Valves
Atrioventricular
Valves
Tricuspid
Valve
Mitral Valve
Semilunar
Valves
Aortic Valve
Pulmonic
Valve
Chordae
Tendonae
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Blood Flow
From the Body
Right
Atrium
To the Lungs
Right
Ventricle
From the
Lungs
Left Atrium
To the Body
Left
Ventricle
Cardiac Circulation
Right Coronary Artery (RCA)
Posterior Descending Artery ( branch of
RCA)
Left Anterior Descending (LAD)
Left Circumflex Artery (LCA)
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Coronary Circulation
Collateral Circulation
Coronary Arteries
Originate in the aorta just above the aortic
valve
Empty into the coronary sinus
Cardiac Physiology
Nervous Control
of the Heart
Sympathetic
Parasympathetic
Autonomic
Control of the
Heart
Chronotropy
Inotropy
Dromotropy
Role of
Electrolytes
Nervous System
The sympathetic system influences both the
atrium and ventricle
The parasympathetic system primarily
influences the atria
When might vagal maneuvers be effective?
Why?
What does Atropine do?
Review
Where is the heart located?
What is its function?
How is the heart organized?
What are the layers of the heart?
What sac surrounds the heart?
Review
What is the average size and shape of the
heart?
Describe the cardiac cycle- diastole and
systole- well talk more about this later!
Which ventricle ejects more blood?
Valve Disorders
Murmors - abnormal sounds
Valvular innsufficiency
Stenosis
Valvular Insufficiency
Growth of scar tissue on the valves as
a result of disease (rheumatic fever).
Valves do not seal and blood leaks
back (gurgitation) Causes detectable
turbulance
Stenosis
Valvular growths narrow openings &
interfere w/blood flow. Increased
pressure is required to force blood
thru. Causes heart to work harder.
Valves are roughened which causes
turbulence and murmur
Functional murmurs
Common in the young, especially
during exercise. Not pathological and
considered normal
Blood Vessels
Vessels of the peripheral circulation are
made up of several layers
tunica intima- innermost lining, one cell
thick
tunica media- elastic fiber and muscle,
thicker in arteries
tunica adventitia- outermost, fibrous lining
lumen- inside cavity
Poiseuilles Law
Amount a vessel can transport is directly
related to its diameter
Blood flow through a vessel is directly
proportional to the 4th power of the
vessels radius
Arterial System
Venous System
Cardiovascular Anatomy
Anatomy of the
Peripheral
Circulation
General Structure
Poiseuilles Law
Arterial System
Arteries, arterioles,
and capillaries
Venous System
Capillaries,
venules, and veins
Terminology
Venous return- amount of blood flowing
into the right atrium each minute from the
systemic circulation
Cardiac output- Amount of blood pumped
into the aorta each minute by the heart
CO = SV X HR
Cont
Stroke volume- amount of blood ejected from a
ventricle with each heart beat- usually 60-100ml
Affected by:
contractility
Cont
Frank Starling Law- greater the volume of
blood in the heart during diastole, more
forceful the contraction
Ejection fraction- percentage of total
ventricular volume ejected during each
myocardial contraction
Cont
Blood pressure- mechanical activity of the
heart reflected by the pulse and BP.
Measures the force exerted on the walls of
the arteries
Peripheral resistance- resistance to the flow
of blood determined by vessel diameter and
tone
BP = CO X PR
Review
Cardiac output =
SV is affected by
Frank Starlings Law affects.
Define
preload
afterload
BP reflects
Cardiac Cycle
The heart performs its pumping action over
and over in a rhythmic sequence:
Atrial Diastole- the atrium is relaxed
allowing blood from the body and lungs to
fill the atrium
As the atria fill with blood, the pressure
rises above that in the ventricles, forcing the
tricuspid and mitral valves to open
allowing blood to fill relaxed (diastole)
ventricles
Cont
Then the atria contracts (systole) filling the
ventricles to capacity. This atrial kick
accounts for 30% of the cardiac output.
What is atrial fibrillation and how might it
affect patients?
Pressure in the atria and ventricles equalize
and the tricuspid and mitral valves begin to
close
Then the ventricles contract (systole)
causing ventricular pressure to rise and the
aortic and pulmonic valves open
Cardiac Physiology
The Cardiac
Cycle
Diastole
Systole
Ejection
Fraction
Stroke Volume
Preload
Cardiac
Contractility
Afterload
Cardiac Output
Heart Cells
Myocardial- mechanical
Pacemaker- electrical
Cardiac Physiology
Cardiac Conductive System
Properties
Excitability
Conductivity
Automaticity
Contractility
Excitability
Irritability
Shared by all cardiac cells
Ability of cardiac muscle cells to respond to
an external stimulus (chemical, electrical,
mechanical)
Conductivity
Ability of cardiac cell to receive an
electrical stimulus and conduct that impulse
to an adjacent cell
All cardiac cells possess this characteristic
Automaticity
Ability of cardiac pacemaker cells to
spontaneously initiate an electrical
impulse
SA node, AV node and Purkinje fibers
usually possess this characteristic
Contractility
Ability of cardiac cells to shorten, causing
muscle contraction in response to electrical
stimulus
Can be enhanced by medications- digitalis,
dopamine, epinephrine
Heart
Composed of cylindrical cardiac cells
that partially divide at their ends.
These connect with branches of
adjacent cells forming a branching and
anastomosing network of cells called
syncytium. At the junctions where
branches join are specialized cellular
membranes called intercalated discs
that permit very rapid conduction of
electrical impulses from one cell to
another.
Cardiac Physiology
Electrophysiology
Cardiac Muscle
Atrial
Ventricular
Excitatory and
Conductive Fibers
Intercalated discs
Syncytium
Atrioventricular Bundle
Depolarization
Cardiac Physiology
Cardiac Conductive
System
Components
Sinoatrial Node
Internodal Atrial
Pathways
Atrioventricular
Node
Atrioventricular
Junction
Bundle of His
Left and Right
Bundle Branches
Purkinje Fibers
Electrical Pathway
Originates in the SA node
Travels down the atrial intranodal and
intraatrial pathways
Slows at the AV node allowing the atria to
contract and empty
Travels to the Bundle of HIS
Travels more rapidly to the bundle branches
Bundle Branches
The left common bundle branch further
divides into two major divisions the left
posterior and left anterior fasicle
The impulse then travels to the Purkinje
fibers causing the ventricles to contract
Electrolytes
Cardiac Function - electrical & mechanical
is influenced by electrolyte (imbalance)
sodiums major role is depolarization of
myocardial cells
calcium major role is depolarization phase of
myocardial pacemaker cells & in myocardial
contractility
hypercalcemia - increases contractility
hypocalcemia - decrease contractility &
increases electrical irritability
Electrolytes (cont.)
Potassium - major role is repolarization
phase
hyperkalemia - decreased automaticity &
conduction
hypokalemia - increased irritability
POLARIZATION
resting membrane potential
DEPOLARIZATION
Cardiac muscle cell is stimulated causing
the inside of the cell to become more
positive
Na+ diffuses into cell resulting in greater
positive charge inside the cell
Change in charge occurs from the
endocardium to the epicardium
REPOLARIZATION
After the cell depolarizes diffusion of Na+
stops
K+ is allowed to diffuse out of cell leaving
negative ions in the cell
Occurs secondary to outward diffusion of
K+
Occurs from epicardium to endocardium
Enhanced Automaticity
Abnormal condition of latent pacemaker
cells when their firing rate is increased
beyond their inherent rate
Enhanced Automaticity
Cell membrane becomes
abnormally permeable
to Na
Na leaks into cell =
sharp rise in phase 4 =
depolarization
Causes atrial, junctional
& ventricular ectopic
beats
Causes
increased
catecholamines
dig toxicity
hypoxia, hypercarbia
ischemia, infarction
hypokalemia,
hypercalcemia
Starlings Law
Atropine
Re-Entry
Condition in which the progression of an
electrical impulse is delayed or blocked in
the coduction system
Impulse is conducted normally through rest
of system
Delayed impulse goes through & goes back
into cells already depolarized
Review
Cardiac Physiology
Cardiac Depolarization
Resting Potential
Action Potential
Repolarization
Concentrations of Extracellular
Ions
Hyperkalemia (K+)- heart becomes
extremely dilated and flaccid, decreased HR
Hypercalcemia (Ca++)- spastic contractions
Hypocalcemia (Ca++)- flaccid, resembles
hyperkalemia
Review
What is the significance of absolute
refractory period?
Relative refractory period?
Why is this important?
During polarization the inside of the cell is
more (negatively/ positively) charged.
Review
Discuss the cardiac cycle
What is the electrical conduction pathway?
OBJECTIVES
Name the common chief complaints of
cardiac patients.
Describe appropriate history and physical
assessment goals for cardiac patients.
ASSESSMENT
Systemic approach
Check for responsiveness
Open airway- patent, suction if needed
Check for breathing- look, listen, feel
Check circulation at Carotid & Radial
simultaneously
capillary refill
Occlusion Data
CP at exertion- 70-85% occlusion
CP at rest 90% occlusion
CP that does not resolve with NTG = 100%
occlusion
Chest Pain
C.P. or discomfort most common presenting
symptom of cardiac disease
C.P. most common presenting symptom of
myocardial infarction
May be atypical especially in the elderly
and womenif in doubt err on the side of
the patient!!
OPQRST
History
Exact location
Duration
Factors precipitating pain- exercise, stress
Associated symptoms- nausea, dyspnea
Aggravating/ alleviating
Similar episodes
Dyspnea
Due to the interrelationship between the
heart and respiratory system
May be the only symptom of AMI
May be primary symptom of pulmonary
fluid congestion secondary to CHF
History
Duration
Onset- sudden/ progressively worse
Aggravates/ alleviates dyspnea
previous episodes
Associated symptoms
Past medical history
Differential diagnosis
Syncope
Interruption of blood flow to the brain
Cardiac problems major cause
May be the only presenting symptom of
cardiac disease, especially elderly
Usually result from dysrhthmias if cardiac
etiology
For exampleexplain
Palpitations
Sensation that the heart is pounding, racing
or skipping a beat
Usually related to irregular or rapid heart
rate
History
Circumstances of occurrence
Duration of occurrence
Associated symptoms
Frequency of occurrence
Previous episodes
Significant PMH
Prescription medications
Medical history
heart attack
angina
heart failure
hypertension
diabetes
Allergies
Differential Diagnosis
Aortic dissection
Acute pericarditis
Acute myocarditis
Pulmonary embolism
Physical Examination
Primary Survey
Secondary Survey
peripheral edema
heart sounds
Heart Sounds
S1- first sound produced by closure of AV
valves (tricuspid, mitral) during ventricle
systole
S2- second sound produced by by closure of
the aortic and pulmonary valves
S3- third sound, associated with CHF
S4- occurs immediately prior to S1
associated with increased atrial contraction
Cont
Carotid Artery Bruit- turbulent blood flow
through a vessel indicative of partial
blockage
Pulse- rate and regularity, equality
Skin- pale and diaphoretic, indicative of
peripheral vasoconstriction and sympathetic
stimulation
Angina
Chest discomfort or other related symptom
caused by myocardial ischemia
Myocardial ischemia occurs when the
hearts demand for O2 exceeds its supply
from the coronary circulation
Pain occurs secondary to the stimulation of
nerve endings caused by a build up of lactic
acid and CO2 in ischemic tissue
Characteristics
Typically- heaviness, pressure, squeezing,
constriction or pain
Common sites- upper part of chest, beneath
sternum radiating left arm, epigastric;
beneath sternum radiating to neck and jaw;
epigastric radiating to neck and jaw; left
shoulder; intrascapular
Diaphoresis, nausea, vomiting, weakness
Cause
Decreased myocardial O2 supply
OR
Increased myocardial O2 demand
IF
Process is not reversed and blood flow
restored severe myocardial ischemia may
lead to cellular injury and eventually,
infarction
Management
Reduce O2 demand
Increase blood flow to the myocardium
What are some methods used to achieve
this?
Stable
Remains relatively constant and predictable
in terms of severity, presentation, character,
precipitating events, response to therapy
Transient episodes of pain or discomfort
related to activities that increase myocardial
O2 demand
Duration- 2-5 minutes, occasionally 5-15
min., > 30 min uncommon
Unstable
Intermediate severity between stable angina
and acute myocardial infarction
Usually a result of plaque rupture or
thrombus formation in a coronary artery and
causes a sudden decrease in myocardial
blood flow; spasm, HTN, hyperthyroidism,
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
ECG Changes
Myocardial ischemia delays repolarization so
ECG may result in temporary changes in the ST
segment and T wave
ST segment- depression
Ischemia present through full thickness of
myocardium- inverted T wave results
Ischemia present only in the subendocardial layer
T wave remains positive because direction of
repolarization remains from the epicardium to the
endocardium
AMI
Diagnosis is based on at least two of the
following criteria:
Clinical Presentation
Chest discomfort suggestive of ischemiaLevines sign
May be accompanied by:
Nausea, vomiting
Dyspnea
Diaphoresis
ECG Changes
Injured myocardium does not function
normally, affecting both muscle contraction
and conduction of electrical impulses
Injured myocardium depolarizes
incompletely and remains electrically more
positive than the uninjured surrounding it
Review
A decreased supply of oxygenated blood to
a body part or organ ?
Describe the pain pattern typically
associated with chronic stable angina.
Describe the characteristics of unstable
angina.
What ECG changes would expect to see in a
patient experiencing angina? Why?
Cont
When assessing a patient what other
possible conditions may a AMI mimic?
The most common presenting symptom of
MI is?
Name some other Sx.
Dissecting Aneurysm
Pain usually described as ripping or tearing
Substernal and radiating to the back
between the scapula
Pulses in lower extremties may be
diminished or absent
Pulses of LA & RA may be markedly
different
HTN with shocky appearance
Pulmonary Embolism
Sudden onset of severe unexplained
dyspnea
Tachypnea
History of recent immobilization
Possible JVD, decreased BP
Pericarditis
Usually younger patients with out cardiac risk
factors
Dyspnea
Tachycardia
Fever
Malaise
Weakness
Chills
Chest Pain
Cont
Increased severity with flat and improves
while sitting up and leaning forward
Rarely radiates down arm
Often pleuritc and increases with inspiration
May last for hours or days
Pericardial friction rub
ST segment elevation in most if not ALL
leads
Scenario
You are called late at night to the home of a
58 yo executive, who is complaining of a
severe pain in his chest. He is pale, cool and
diaphoretic. He is also nauseated.
History
Has had back pain for several days which he
thought was a strain and has been taking OTC
pain relievers- ASA, ibuprofen
Chest pain started about 30 minutes ago
Sharp, tearing pain constant- 10/10
Radiating through to his back
Meds- ASA, NTG, some blood pressure pills
PMH- angina, HTN
Allergies- PCN
Vital Signs
Physical Exam
Differential Diagnosis
Describe the steps you took to arrive at this
conclusion.
Significance
Scenario
Your patient is a 68 yo female complaining
of severe SOB. She denies any pain or other
complaints. She appears to be in acute
respiratory distress. Skin- cool, clammy.
History
SOB came on quite suddenly about 10 minutes
ago while she was watching television
She smokes 1 pack/ day since she was 20 yo
Denies C.P., nausea, vomiting
Meds- arthritis pain killers NKDA
PMH- arthritis, the weather has been severe and
she has been unable to get around and do much
due to her arthritis so she sure is glad she has
cable. She even sleeps on the couch! Her daughter
brings meals and empties the bed pan. By the way
could you empty it while you are here?
Vital Signs
Physical Exam
HEENT- normocephalic, atraumatic
No JVD, No TD, PERL
CHEST- stable, = rise, moderate resp effort with
some accessory m. use, speaks in short sentences
HEART- RRR LUNGS- CTA bilaterally
ABD- SNT, -N, -V
EXTREMITIES- PMS =/present x 4, no pedal
edema, no clubbing, peripheral cyanosis present,
MAE
Differential Diagnosis
WHY?
SIGNIFICANCE
Scenario
A 30 yo male is c/o chest pain and wants
you to take him to his doctor. He has a fever
and chills feels weak all over. Skin- warm,
dry.
History
Patient has had some chest pain for a day or two
Substrenal with no radiation and it hurts like @#!$
you moron or why would he be calling?! He cant
even like down to sleep now and hes exhausted.
He awoke this afternoon sitting up in his chair
with a fever and chills
Meds- None Allergies- NKDA
PMH- admits to some IV drug abuse occasionally
Vital Signs
Physical Exam
HEENT- normocephalic, atraumatic
No JVD, NO TD, PERL
CHEST- = rise with sl shallow resp., pain
on deep inspiration
HEART- RRR LUNGS- CTA bilat
ABD- SNT
EXTREMITIES- PMS =/present x4, No
pedal edema, MAEW
Differential Diagnosis
Why?
What might you expect to see on an ECG?
What might you hear while auscultating the
lungs/ heart?
Significance
Scenario
You arrive at the home of a 42 yo female
c/o substernal chest pain. She appears
anxious and apprehensive. Skin- pale, cool,
diaphoretic.
History
She has been having substernal chest pain for
about an hour. It started while she was balancing
her checkbook.
She states it is not really pain but feels as if an
elephant is sitting on her chest and she cant quite
catch her breath. 8/10
The discomfort radiates to her left shoulder and
she has been nauseated
Meds- None Allergies- Codeine
PMH- None, never had anything like this happen
before
Vital Signs
Physical Exam
HEENT- normocephalic, atraumatic, No
JVD
CHEST- =/ good excursion, normal resp
effort HEART- sl. irregular, clear
LUNGS- CTA bilat
ABD- SNT, +N, +V x1
EXTREMITIES- PMS =/present x 4, No
pedal edema, MAE
Differential Diagnosis
WHY?
SIGNIFICANCE