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Nursing 2514

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Stroke Volume: amount of blood heart will eject/min. ... Output: volume ejected by the ... Systolic ejection (resting/filling) power is relative to volume. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Nursing 2514


1
Nursing 2514
  • Cardiac Anatomy Physiology
  • with
  • Diagnostic Tests

2
Heart Location
  • Located slightly to the left of midline
  • Approximately the size of your fist
  • Surrounded by
  • Sternum Vertebrae
  • Lungs Major blood vessels

3
Layers of Heart
  • Endocardium
  • Thin innermost layer
  • Myocardium
  • Muscular layer
  • Epicardium
  • Outer serous membrane
  • Pericardium
  • Sac that covers the heart

4
Coronary arteries
  • Right coronary artery
  • Left coronary Arteries
  • 2 main branches
  • anterior descending
  • circumflex

5
Coronary Blood SupplyArterial
  • Sinuses of Valsalva
  • Open to right Left coronary arteries
  • Blood flow occurs during diastole
  • Right coronary artery
  • Right atrium ventricle
  • Portion of posterior wall of left ventricle
  • 90 of population AV Node
  • Left coronary arteries
  • Left anterior descending artery
  • Left circumflex artery
  • left atrium ventricle

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7
Coronary Blood SupplyVenous
  • Coronary veins are parallel to the arteries
  • System drains into the coronary sinus
  • Empties into right atrium near inferior vena cava

8
Heart is a hollow muscular organ
  • Four interior chambers
  • Superior chambers
  • Atrium
  • For receiving blood
  • Inferior chambers
  • Ventricles
  • For propelling blood

9
Function
  • Two separate pumps
  • Right sided
  • Transports unoxygenated blood
  • Pumps to pulmonary system
  • Left Sided
  • Transports oxygenated blood
  • Pumps to entire body

10
Heart valves
  • Heart valves
  • Prevent backflow of blood into atria
  • Attached with chordae tendineae to papillary
    muscles of ventricles
  • Prevents eversion of valve

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12
Heart valves
  • Heart valves
  • Right Heart
  • Tricuspid valve
  • Between right atria ventricle
  • Left Heart
  • Mitral valve
  • Between left atria ventricle

13
Heart Sounds
S1 is the Lub Sound produces as the result of
the heart valves closing
14
Valves of Heart
  • Valves to Major Vessels
  • Right heart
  • Pulmonic
  • Located between right ventricle and pulmonary
    artery
  • Left Heart
  • Aortic
  • Located between left ventricle and aorta

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16
Heart Sounds
  • S2
  • Is the Dub
  • Sound created when the major vessel valves close

17
Heart Sounds
  • S3 heart sound is heard after S2
  • Caused by ventricular filling
  • Associated with
  • Left ventricular failure
  • Mitral valve regurgitation

18
Heart Sounds
  • S4 heart sound is heard before S1
  • Caused by atrial contraction
  • Associated with
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Left ventricular hypertrophy
  • Aortic stenosis

19
Problem with Valves
  • Would expect to hear murmurs in patients with
    valve problems.
  • Patients with valve disease or heart murmurs may
    need to have prophylactic antibiotics before
    major dental work.

20
Problem with Valves
  • Patients with prosthetic valves may be at risk
    for infective endocarditis from just having their
    teeth cleaned.

21
Think about it.
  • After valve replacement if a patient has sudden
    calf pain the leg is pale cool with no
    pulses, what would you expect what would you do
    to the patients position in bed?

22
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23
Circulation of Blood Through the Body
  • Unoxygenated blood
  • Capillaries
  • Veins
  • Vena cava
  • Right atrium
  • Tricuspid valve
  • Right ventricle
  • Pulmonic valve
  • Pulmonary Artery
  • Lungs
  • Oxygenated blood
  • Lungs
  • Pulmonary vein
  • Left atria
  • Mitral valve
  • Left ventricle
  • Aortic valve
  • Aorta
  • Arteries
  • Capillaries

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26
Blood vessels
  • Arteries
  • Blood flows away from heart
  • Large thick walled vessels
  • Containing smooth muscle
  • Allows for vasoconstriction or dilation

27
Blood vessels
  • Veins
  • Blood flows toward heart
  • Large diameter
  • Thin walled
  • Contain semi lunar valves to prevent back flow of
    blood
  • Capillaries
  • Thin walled (one cell)
  • Allows for transport of
  • nutrients waste
  • Oxygen carbon dioxide

28
Pulse Sites
29
Cardiac Muscle Properties
  • Automaticity
  • Performed without conscious control
  • Heart rate
  • Contractility
  • Ability to shorten in response to stimulus.

30
Cardiac Muscle Properties
  • Conductivity
  • Ability/capacity to transmit electrical impulses.
  • Excitability
  • Readiness to respond to a stimulus
    irritability.

31
Cardiac Muscle Properties
  • Refractory
  • The period of depolarization and re-polarization
    of the cell membrane after excitation.
  • During the first period (absolute refractory
    period), the nerve or muscle fiber cannot respond
    to a second stimulus. QRS complex.
  • During the relative refractory period, it can
    respond only to a strong stimulus. T wave.

32
Cardiac Muscle Properties
  • NOTE Any property of the cardiac muscle can be
  • Positive (potentates, fosters, activates)
  • Negative (negates, inhibits, blocks, prevents).

33
Cardiac Muscle
  • Automaticity Heart rate.
  • Chronotropic ( or -).
  • Rate, rhythm, function of heart.
  • Spontaneous, repetitive depolarization

34
Cardiac Muscle
  • Automaticity
  • Heart rate.
  • Specialized cells in the SA node, parts of the
    atria, AV node His-Purkinje system are able to
    discharge spontaneously.
  • Normal pacemeker of the heart SA node, right
    atrium.
  • Discharges 60-100 times per minute.

35
Cardiac Muscle
  • Automaticity
  • Secondary pacemakers that can take over
  • AV node (40-60 times/min.) or
  • The His-Purkinje system (30-40 times/min.).
  • Early or late escaping triggered beats include
    ectopic focus in atria, ventricles or AV nodal
    area. May present as a run of irregular beats,
    replacing the NSR (normal sinus rhythm).

36
Cardiac Muscle
  • Contractility
  • Inotropic affecting the force of muscular
    contractions ( or -) Contracts as a whole unit
    simultaneously, efficiently, not randomly.
  • Contraction of heart muscle causes heart to beat.

37
Cardiac Muscle, cont.
  • Conductivity
  • Dromotropic. Orderly.
  • Electrical impulses sent.

38
Cardiac Muscle
  • Excitability
  • Impulse started by a pacemaker conducted to the
    entire heart chamber.
  • Allows heart muscle to be depolarized by a
    stimulus, an important part of the transmission
    of impulse from one fiber to another.
  • Determined by length of time after depolarization
    that the tissues can be restimulated.

39
Cardiac Muscle
  • Refractory Phase recovery period after
    stimulation (absolute or relative).

40
Preload
  • How forcefully ventricles contract in systole.
  • Amount of pressure on the left ventricles wall
    just before it contracts.
  • Filling of ventricles at end of diastole
    (resting).

41
Afterload
  • Amount of pressure in the aorta that the
    ventricle must overcome to pump blood into
    systemic circulation.
  • Resistance heart has to overcome to efficiently
    pump blood to peripheral systemic circulation.
  • Cant measure directly wedge pressures (left
    sided heart pressures) CVP.

42
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43
Stroke Volume
  • Stroke Volume amount of blood heart will
    eject/min.
  • Affected by preload, afterload contractibility.
  • If you increase the heart rate, the heart cant
    get rid of all the blood so the SV goes down.
  • In PVD atherosclerosis there is increased
    pressure in the aorta from resistance coming out.

44
Cardiac Output
  • Cardiac Output volume ejected by the ventricles
    with each beat.
  • Affected by preload amount of blood in
    ventricles at end of diastole before next
    contraction.
  • CO Heart rate (beats/min.) X SV (volume/beat)
    5-8 Liters/min.
  • Example 70 beats/min. X 60-80ml/beat 4200 to
    5600 cc (4.2 5.6 Liters)

45
SV and CO
  • Right sided heart problems
  • Increased preload
  • Hepatomegaly
  • Increased JVD, etc.
  • Pulmonary edema Roman crucifixions.
  • Systolic ejection (resting/filling) power is
    relative to volume.
  • Review valsalvas impact on the heart for
    patients with compromised cardiac conditions.

46
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47
Cardiac History
  • Elevated B/P
  • Skin turgor
  • Coronary artery condition
  • Meds
  • Surgeries
  • Lifestyle
  • Smoker
  • Alcohol consumption
  • Exercise
  • Sleep
  • Chest pain
  • Stress
  • Psychosocial
  • physical
  • Gender
  • Age
  • Menopausal

48
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49
Changes with Age
  • Weaker intimal linings of vascular circulation
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Elevated B/P
  • Decreased perfusion

50
Nursing 2514
  • Cardiac Diagnostic Tests

51
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • Blood work
  • Triglycerides (HDL/LDL ratios).
  • Cardiac enzymes CPK, LDH, troponin.
  • Coagulation studies (PT, PTT, INR)
  • Digoxin level.

52
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • Blood work
  • Cholesterol
  • Lipoproteins
  • Serum electrolytes
  • Liver function tests
  • Arterial blood gases

53
Diagnostics - Enzymes
  • Iso-enzyme subcategories specify where injury is
    located.
  • LDH (N 110-120) heart, liver, kidneys.
  • There are 5.
  • LDH 1 2 normally 2 is gt 1 but in an MI, 1 is
    gt2.
  • CPK
  • Mm (regular striated muscle)
  • Mb (brain)
  • BB (heart) gt5 is MI.
  • Starts to rise 3-6 hours after injury.
  • Peaks 12-24 hours and stays elevated 3-4 days.

54
Enzymes, cont.
  • Troponin enzyme changes in heart.
  • Rises in 2-4 hours stays elevated 8-9 days.
  • Usually gt1.5 is MI.

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56
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • 12 Lead EKG possible changes R/O MI.
  • Ischemia inverted T wave. Repolarization is
    late in leads II, III AVF depressed ST.
  • MI or injury Q wave or ST elevation.
  • Elevated troponin CK enzyme
  • Chest X Ray

57
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • Halter Monitor
  • Phonocardiogram.
  • Echocardiogram.
  • Doppler flow studies

58
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • MRI
  • Nuclear Imaging cardiology (PET, MUGA, thallium
    scans, etc.)
  • Pharmacological stress testing persantine,
    dobutamine.
  • For those who cant do physical testing
    (amputees, etc.)

59
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • Mechanical stress testing treadmill.
  • Radioactive drugs (isotope scan)
  • TEE (trans esophageal echocardiogram sound
    waves).

60
Cardio-vascular Disorders Diagnostics
  • Angiography right/left coronary arteries
    branches.
  • Invasive scope down back side of heart.
  • EP (electro physiology) studies in lab with or
    without ablation.
  • Note Some of the stress testing may
    precipitate a heart attack or irregular rhythm.

61
Cardiac Catheterization
  • Sign consent. Allergic to dye?
  • Take shower.
  • NPO 6-8 hours.

62
Cardiac Catheterization
  • Catheterized through groin or brachial artery
    (arm).
  • Inject dye through coronary arteries
    chambers/valves.
  • Hydrate well during procedure.
  • May give benedryl or steroids if allergic
    reaction.

63
Cardiac Catheterization
  • Post procedure
  • Lie flat about 6 hours, keep legs or arm
    straight.
  • Vital signs every 15/30/60 minutes.
  • Frequent checking for bleeding at site.
  • Bleeding versus oozing (gushing). Manual pressure
    for latter.
  • Dressing versus 10 lb. Sandbag or FemStop
    occlusion.

64
Cardiac Catheterization
  • Post procedure
  • Frequent check of pulses distally
  • Check sensorium/ LOC
  • Cardiac monitoring
  • Pain check meds
  • Discharge continue to check for bleeding
    circulation

65
Clip art work from
  • Mosby s Electronic Image Collection
  • Life Art
  • Microsoft Clip Art
  • Memory Notebook of Nursing
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