3.4.4

The Heart

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Structure

The heart is the muscular organ that pumps blood to and from the lungs and around the body. The heart consists of four chambers and each chamber is very important.

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Right atrium

  • Deoxygenated blood flows into the right atrium from the body.
  • The vein that pumps deoxygenated blood into the right atrium is called the vena cava.
  • The right atrium is the first chamber that deoxygenated blood flows through.
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Right ventricle

  • When the walls of the right atrium contracts, deoxygenated blood flows into the right ventricle.
  • The atrioventricular valves prevent blood from flowing back into the atria from the ventricles.
  • Then the walls of the right ventricle contracts, blood is pumped out of the pulmonary artery to the lungs.
  • The semi-lunar valves prevent blood from flowing back into the right ventricle from the pulmonary artery.
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Left atrium

  • Oxygenated blood flows into the left atrium from the lungs.
  • The vein that pumps oxygenated blood into the left atrium is called the pulmonary vein.
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Left ventricle

  • When the walls of the left atrium contracts, oxygenated blood flows into the left ventricle.
  • The atrioventricular valves prevent blood from flowing back into the atria from the ventricles.
  • The walls of the left ventricle are considerably thicker than the right ventricle.
    • The left ventricle has to transport blood all the way around the body but the right ventricle only has to transport blood to the lungs.
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Aorta

  • When the left ventricle contracts, blood is pumped out of the heart to the rest of the body.
  • Oxygenated blood leaves the heart through the aorta.
  • The semi-lunar valves prevent blood from flowing back into the left ventricle from the aorta.

The Cardiac Cycle

The flow of blood from the lungs to the heart and around the body is called the cardiac cycle. The cardiac cycle is the continuous relaxing and contracting of the heart. The steps involved are:

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1) Atrial contraction

  • Blood from the lungs flows into the left atrium and blood from the body flows into the right atrium simultaneously.
  • The atria contract, increasing the pressure in the atria.
  • The blood in the atria is forced into the ventricles.
  • The ventricles are relaxed and fill with blood.
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2) Ventricular contraction

  • The atria relax and the ventricles start to contract.
  • Contraction of the ventricles causes the pressure inside the ventricles to increase.
  • The pressure shuts the atrioventricular valves so that blood does not flow back into the atria.
  • The blood in the ventricles is forced out of the ventricles and out of the heart through the pulmonary artery or the aorta.
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3) Relaxation

  • The blood in the pulmonary artery and the aorta is at high pressure. -The pressure shuts the semi-lunar valves so that blood does not flow back into the ventricles.
  • Both the ventricles and the atria relax and the atrioventricular valves reopen.
  • Blood flows into the ventricles and the atria from the pulmonary vein and vena cava.
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4) Repeat

  • The cycle continues.

Interpreting Data

At each stage in the cardiac cycle, the pressure and volume of the atria and ventricles changes considerably. These changes can be presented as a change over time.

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Pressure in the atria

  • When the atria contract, the pressure in the atria increases.
  • When the atria relax and the ventricles contract, the pressure in the atria decreases.
  • When both the atria and the ventricles relax, there is a slight increase as the atria fill with blood again.
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Pressure in the ventricles

  • When the atria contract, the pressure in the ventricles is relatively low. There is a slight increase in pressure as the ventricles fill with blood.
  • When the ventricles contract, the pressure increases dramatically. The pressure increases considerably more than when the atria contract.
  • When both the atria and the ventricles relax, there is a slight increase as the ventricles fill with blood again.
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Volume in the atria

  • When the atria contract, the volume in the atria decreases.
  • When the atria relax and the ventricles contract, the volume in the atria increases again.
  • When both the atria and the ventricles relax, there is a slight decrease when blood flows into the ventricles from the atria.
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Volume in the ventricles

  • When the atria contract, the volume in the ventricles increases slightly as they fill with blood.
  • When the ventricles contract, the volume decreases dramatically. The volume decreases considerably more than when the atria contract.
  • When both the atria and the ventricles relax, the volume increases as the ventricles expand again.

Jump to other topics

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8The Control of Gene Expression (A2 only)

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