Cardiovascular Emergencies Part I (1.5 Hours) |
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Cardiac Vascular System |
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The vascular system is comprised of the heart and blood vessels. The largest blood vessel is the aorta, which is comprised of three parts, the ascending (up the neck and into the head), the thoracic (chest), and abdominal. After blood passes through those great vessels, it moves through arteries and then arterioles (as they get smaller). From arterioles (which are microscopic at this point), the blood flows into capillaries. It is at the capillaries that oxygen is offloaded from the vessel and into the surrounding tissue (at the same time, waste products like CO2 are loaded into the capillary - the process is called diffusion). After diffusion has occurred at the cell – capillary level, the blood begins its’ trip back to the heart by entering venules and then passing through veins. All of the veins in the body converge onto another great vessel called the vena cava (cave vein). The vena cava is comprised of two parts, the superior and inferior. So how does blood actually return to the heart after passing through all of those arteries and veins (keeping in mind that veins are not powered by the heart)? There are 4 main mechanisms:
The diseases discussed in this lecture will often involve coronary circulation. The heart like any other muscle in your body requires a constant supply of oxygenated blood and a way to get waste products out. To bring the oxygen in, the heart has several coronary arteries:
Like every other muscle in your body, the heart has veins. The veins of the heart are the coronary sinus and the great cardiac vein |
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A drop of blood is delivered to the extremities by force of contraction from the heart. What mechanism(s) are utilized to return that very same drop of blood to the heart to be reoxygenated and subsequently pumped to the body again?
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