KINESIOL 2YY3 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Heart Valve, Systolic Geometry, Diastole

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Heart is two pumps that work together, right and left half. There are two main phases to the cardiac cycle. Repetitive contraction (systole) and relaxation (diastole) of heart chambers. Blood moves through circulatory system from areas of higher pressure to lower pressure. We want to fully pump the blood into the ventricle before we fully close of the valve. Muscle is relaxed, not contracting (allows for filling) Atria and ventricles differ slightly in their timing of each state. Phase 1: atrial contraction (systole) - atrial systole - active ventricular filling. Squeezing that last bit of blood into the ventricle. Atria is in systole, ventricles are in diastole. Isovolumetric - all the valves are always closed - no volume changes. The high pressure of the ventricle closes the av valve. Capillary muscles and chordae tendineae hold the av closed. The cusps of the semilunar valve cusps are filled, causing them to close. The heart muscle is relaxing, getting larger in volume.

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