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NR 302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION / NR302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION : 100% CORRECT,CHAMBERLAIN COLLEGE OF NURSING, $18.49   Add to cart

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NR 302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION / NR302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION : 100% CORRECT,CHAMBERLAIN COLLEGE OF NURSING,

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NR 302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION / NR302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION : 100% CORRECT,CHAMBERLAIN COLLEGE OF NURSING,NR 302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE SOLUTION / NR302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT ...

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NR 302 EXAM 3 HEALTH ASSESSMENT: HEART AND NECK VESSELS COMPLETE
SOLUTION



Heart and Neck Vessels
Position and Surface Landmarks
o Precordium: area on anterior chest overlying heart and great vessels
o During contraction, apex beats against chest wall, producing an apical impulse
o Heart has four chambers: atria and ventricles
o Great vessels lie bunched above base of heart
o Pulmonary veins return freshly oxygenated blood to left side of heart, and aorta carries
it out to body


Heart Wall, Chambers, and Valves
o Heart wall has numerous layers
 Pericardium: tough, fibrous, double-walled sac that surrounds and protects
heart
 Myocardium: muscular wall of heart; it does pumping
 Endocardium: thin layer of endothelial tissue that lines inner surface of heart
chambers and valves
o Heart has two pump systems
o Each side of the heart has an atrium and ventricle
 Atrium: thin-walled reservoir for holding blood
 Ventricle: thick-walled, muscular pumping chamber
 Heart Chambers and Valves
o Four chambers separated by valves, whose main purpose is to prevent backflow of
blood
 Valves are unidirectional: can only open one way
 Valves open and close passively in response to pressure gradients in moving
blood
o Four valves in heart
 Two atrioventricular (AV) valves
 Two semilunar (SL) valves


AV Valves
o Two AV valves separate atria and ventricles
 Tricuspid valve: right AV valve
 Bicuspid, or mitral valve: left AV valve
• Valves’ thin leaflets are anchored by collagenous fibers (chordae
tendineae) to papillary muscles embedded in ventricle floor

,  AV valves open during heart’s filling phase, or diastole, to allow ventricles to fill
with blood
 During pumping phase, or systole, AV valves close to prevent regurgitation of
blood back up into atria

SL Valves
o SL valves are set between ventricles and arteries
 Each valve has three cusps that look like half moons
 Pulmonic valve: SL valve in right side of heart
 Aortic valve: SL valve in left side of heart
• Open during pumping, or systole, to allow blood to be ejected from
heart
 No valves are present between vena cava and right atrium, or between
pulmonary veins and left atrium, for this reason
• Abnormally high pressure in left side of heart gives a person symptoms
of pulmonary congestion
• Abnormally high pressure in right side of heart shows in neck veins and
abdomen
• Chambers and Valves

Direction of Blood Flow I
Unoxygenated red blood drains into vena cava, follows route of venous blood
o From liver to right atrium (RA) through inferior vena cava
 Superior vena cava drains venous blood from the head and upper extremities
 From RA, venous blood travels through tricuspid valve to right ventricle (RV)
o From RV, venous blood flows through pulmonic valve to pulmonary artery
 Pulmonary artery delivers unoxygenated blood to lungs


Direction of Blood Flow II
 Lungs oxygenate blood
• Pulmonary veins return fresh blood to LA
 From LA, arterial blood travels through mitral valve to LV
• LV ejects blood through aortic valve into aorta
 Aorta delivers oxygenated blood to body
o Circulation is continuous loop; blood is kept moving by continually shifting pressure
gradients
 Blood flows from area of higher pressure to area of lower pressure

Cardiac Cycle
o Rhythmic flow of blood through heart is cardiac cycle
 Has two phases, diastole and systole
 Diastole: ventricles relax and fill with blood; this takes up two thirds of cardiac
cycle
 Systole: heart’s contraction, blood pumped from ventricles fills pulmonary and
systemic arteries; this is one third of cardiac cycle

, Cardiac Cycle: Diastole
 Ventricles relaxed, and AV valves, tricuspid and mitral, are open; opening of
normal valve is silent
 Pressure in atria higher than that in ventricles, so blood pours rapidly into
ventricles
• This first passive filling phase called protodiastolic filling
 Toward end of diastole, atria contract and push last amount of blood into
ventricles
• This active filling phase called presystole, or atrial systole
o Note that atrial systole occurs during ventricular diastole, a confusing but important
point

Cardiac Cycle: Systole
o Ventricular pressure becomes higher than that in atria, so mitral and tricuspid valves
close
o Closure of AV valves contributes to first heart sound (S1) and signals beginning of systole
 AV valves close to prevent any regurgitation of blood back up into atria during
contraction
o For a very brief moment, all four valves are closed and ventricular walls contract
 Isometric contraction: this contraction against closed system works to build high
level pressure in ventricles

Events in Right and Left Side of Heart I
Systole
o Consider left side of heart
o When pressure in ventricle finally exceeds pressure in aorta, aortic valve opens and
blood is ejected rapidly
 After ventricle’s contents are ejected, its pressure falls
o When pressure falls below pressure in aorta, some blood flows backward toward
ventricle, causing aortic valve to close
o This closure of semilunar valves causes second heart sound (S2) and signals end of
systole


Events in Right and Left Side of Heart II
o Diastole again
 Now all four valves are closed and ventricles relax
• Isometric or isovolumic relaxation
 Atria have been filling with blood delivered from lungs
 Atrial pressure now higher than relaxed ventricular pressure
 Mitral valve opens and diastolic filling begins again


Events in Right and Left Side of Heart III

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