Key guiding questions:
- What are the two main phases of the cardiac cycle and their durations?
- What are the key events that occur during ventricular systole?
- How does ventricular systole affect the opening of the aortic and pulmonary valves?
- What are the key events that occur during ventricular diastole?
- What is relationship between the ventricular pressure vs volume during various the cardiac cycle?
FOCUSED NOTES
Cardiac Cycle
DURATION: 0.8 s
Ventricle |
Atrium |
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Systole |
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Diastole |
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- At the beginning of cardiac cycle, characteristic features during diastole are:
- All the 4 chambers are relaxed and filled with blood due to venous return.
- As A-V valve opens, atrium and ventricle of each side comes in continuity to each other and the pressure in each cavity is equal.
Phases
- Atrial systole: atrial contraction phase (0.1sec)
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- Follows impulse generation in the S.A. Node.
- Atrial muscle contracts and the pressure increases.
- Propels 30% of additional blood into the ventricles.
- Ventricular systole: (0.27 sec)
- Isometric contraction: 0.05sec
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- Ventricles contract and the pressure exceeds the atrial pressure.
- Closure of AV Valvesà first heart sound.
- Bulging of AV valves into the atrium.
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- Ventricular systole proper: (0.25 sec)- pressure in ventricles exceeds the arterial system.
- Rapid ejection phase: (0.1sec)
- Ventricular systole proper: (0.25 sec)- pressure in ventricles exceeds the arterial system.
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- Intra ventricular pressure rises to the maximum and increases the ventricular output.
- 2/3rd of the stroke volume is ejected.
- AV valves come back to original position & a sharp fall in atrial pressure occurs.
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- Slow ejection phase (0.15sec)
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- Ventricular contraction subsides and the pressure decreases.
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- Ventricular diastole: (0.5sec)
- Proto diastole: (0.04sec)
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- Ventricular pressure drops more rapidly. Closure of Semilunar valvesà second heart sound.
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- Isometric relaxation: (0.08sec)
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- Initial part of ventricular diastole.
- Intra ventricular pressure drops, ventricular muscle continues to relax without change in the ventricular volume.
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- Ventricular diastole proper: Passive filling of ventricles (70%)
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- Initial rapid filling phase: opening of AV Valves and continued relaxation of ventricles.
- Slow filling phase (Diastasis): continuous venous return filling both atrium & ventricles.
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- Atrial diastole: (0.7 sec)
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- Atrial muscle relaxes and the pressure gradually increases due to venous return.
Ventricular Pressure-Volume Relationship (LOOP)
- Phase a (diastole): Ventricular filling
- Phase b (systole): Isovolumetric contraction
- Phase c (systole): Ejection
- Phase d (diastole): Isovolumetric relaxation
- Point 1: volume at the end of ventricular filling (diastole) therefore represents the end-diastolic pressure and end-diastolic volume (EDV)
- Point 1: aortic valve closes & ejection ceases therefore represents the end-systolic (residual) volume (ESV).
- Width of the loop: represents the difference between EDV and ESV = stroke volume (SV).
- The area within the loop = ventricular stroke work.
Extra Edge
Valvular events |
Cardiac events |
ECG |
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- End diastolic volume: volume of blood in the ventricles at the end of diastole (Maximum volume of blood)
- Stroke volume: volume of blood ejected by the ventricles per stroke at rest.
- End systolic volume: EDV-SV.
Cardiac Cycle & Pressure Volume Loop MCQ’s