Saturday, May 2, 2009

Cardiac Conduction System

March 26, 2009. The heart doe not have neurons(nerve tissue). The heart’s beating is from specialized cardiac muscle fibers that are the source of the electrical activity. These muscle fibers are called autorhythmic cells and the act as a pacemaker setting the contraction rhythm for the entire heart. Cardiac conduction system begins at sinatorial node(SA) on the back wall of the right atrium. The action potential causes the atria to contract and travel to the atrioventricular node(AV). The AV node is located in the interatrial septum, anterior to the opening of the coronary sinus. From the AV node to action potential enters the bundle of His, this is the site where the action potential moves from the atria to the ventricles. The action potential enters both the right and left bundle branches and travels through the interventricular septum toward the apex. Purkinje fibers rapidly conduct the action potential to the apex of the ventricles. The ventricles contract pushing the blood up toward the semilunar valves. This SA node action potential happens about 100 times a minute. Na+(sodium) ions are used for conduction, the Na+ causes Ca+(calcium) ion channels to open. Ca+ ions drives contraction. The phase of contraction is referred to as systole, the relaxation phase is diastole. Blood pressure is systolic over the diastolic, the force exerted by circulating blood on the walls of the blood vessels.
Cardiac patients are seen often at the hospital. Some patients present with extreme high blood pressures where others present with extreme low BP’s. Vital signs are one of the duties I perform. Understanding the conduction system of the heart gives me more knowledge as to why a doctor would be concerned with a dramatic change in vital signs.

Fetal Circulation

April 9, 2009. The fetal circulation begins at the placenta. The placenta moves blood to the fetus via the umbilical vein. ½ of this blood enters the ductus venosus, a shunting vessel that moves 80% of the blood directly into the inferior vena cava. The other ½ of blood enters the liver through the umbilical vein into the right lobe of the liver. The umbilical vein joins with the portal vein of the liver the blood is moved to the right atrium of the heart. From the right atrium some of the blood flows through an opening, the foramen ovale, between the right and left atrium. From the left atrium blood moves to the left ventricle up through the aorta and out into the body. Some of the blood moves from the aorta to the internal iliac arteries, and out through the umbilical arteries where it re-enters the placenta. From the placenta the carbon dioxide and waste are taken up by the mothers circulation for elimination. Some of the blood from the right atrium does not go through the foramen ovale it enters the right ventricle and is pumped into the pulmonary artery where a special connection, ductus arteriosus between pulmonary artery and aorta, directs blood away from the lungs. The lungs are not in use because the fetus is suspended in fluid, oxygen is supplied through the umbilical cord. The foramen ovale in a fetus has a flap of tissue over it that becomes fossa ovalis which becomes a thicken membrane of the right atrium in adults. The ductus arteriosus of a fetus closes after birth and becomes ligamentum venosum. The ductus venosus of a fetus becomes ligamentum venosum after birth.
Being a mother I never really knew the fetal circulation pathways. It is amazing how our body produces these shunting vessels needed during fetal development to transport blood to areas thus bypassing the pulmonary circuit which is there just waiting to be used after birth. Once the fetus has been born and it takes a breath signaling the pulmonary circuit to kick in, the body knows to close the vessels and they become a membrane and ligaments. Human body amazement.

Inflammation

April 14, 2009. The Immune response to a break in the skin. Phagocytosis occurs:
Chemotaxis-chemically stimulated movement of phagocytes to the area of the break in the skin. Phagocyte binds to microbe. Pseudopods extend from the plasma membrane and engulf the microbe, when the pseudopods meet they surround the microbe with a sac called a phagosome. The phagosome meets a lysosome in the cytoplasma and they merge becoming a phagolysosome. The phagolysosome releases digestive enzymes and oxidants that quickly kill many types of microbes. Inflammation is a non-specific immune response. The signs and symptoms associative with inflammation: 1. Is swelling-edema where vasodilation increases fluid to the area and it leaks into the nearby tissue, 2. Then there is pain because of the excess fluid in the surrounding tissue is putting pressure on the sensory neurons. 3 & 4. There is redness/higher temperature because of the extra blood flow to the region of the break in the skin. The are 3 basic stages to the inflammatory response: 1. Vasodilation, 2. Movement of phagocytes from blood into interstitial fluid, and 3. Tissue repair. This happens in the first 3 days of damage.
The everyday use of aspirin and ibuprofen blocks the COX 1 and COX 2 enzymes. COX1 is responsible for baseline of prostaglandins. COX 2 produces prostaglandins through stimulation. Prostaglandins are produced from mast cells and are a group of lipids that case vasodilation. COX 1 and COX 2 are 2 enzymes that take the fatty acid tails of Arachodonic acid to prostaglandins. Arachodonic acid is the precursor for production of signaling molecules. Blocking these with aspirin and NSAID’s can cause the healing process to slow.

Antibodies

April 16th 2009. Antibodies aka immunoglobulins. The structure of an antibody consists of 2 heavy chains, 2 light chains. The flexible area of the heavy chain located about midregion is called the hinge region because it bends to assume the T or Y shape. At the ends of the “arms” of the T or Y is the region called the antigen binding site. This site recognizes and binds to unique antigens of complementary shapes. The hinge region allows for binding of two antigens some distance apart. Antibodies are taggers, they tag the surface of the pathogen for the macrophage to find it. Macrophages are the killers of the pathogens. Neutrophils are the suicide squad, they destroy the pathogen along with themselves in the process. There are 5 classes of immunoglobulins:
IgD-is a monomer located on the surface of a B-cell. Its function is to recognize antigens
IgA-is a dimer located in bodily secretions and passes through breast milk.. Its function is to prevent antigens from binding to the mucosal surface.
IgM-is a pentamer and the 1st antibody class secreted by plasma cells after the initial exposure to any antigen. Its function is recognition and lysis.
IgE-is a monomer and is located on the surface of mast cells and basophils. Its function is to induce the release of histamine in the presence of antigens.
IgG-is a monomer found in the blood, lymph, and intestines. Its function is protect against bacteria and viruses by enhancing phagocytosis, neutralizing toxins and triggering the complement system. This class can cross the placenta from mother to fetus.
During a 2nd exposure, memory B-cells will make clonal copies, faster mitosis to replicate cells. Memory B-cells are activated B-cells that went through mitosis in the 1st exposure and left a group a cells that will remain and circulate throughout one’s body for the rest of their life.
Vaccination is an occurrence in every life unless there is a personal reason or belief against having them. When I was in elementary school we were given vaccines at school. Today you take your child to your healthcare provider. The vaccine introduces a small part of a microbe that has been weakened or killed so it will not infect, into a person to mount an immune response. It is quickly cleared away but the memory B-cells are left circulating in our systems waiting for a 2nd exposure if there is one.

Digestive System

Week of April 30th 2009 we are covering the digestive system. The alimentary canal (GI tract) extends from the mouth to the anus. 6 processes of the digestive system: ingestion, secretion, mix and propel, digestion, absorption and defecation. GI tract has 4 layers: 1. Mucosa-the inner most layer which is avascular. Compromised of simple columnar epithelial cells. 2. Submucosa-highly vascular, may contain glands and lymphatic tissue and is composed of areolar connective tissue. An extensive network of neurons known as the submucosal plexus is found in this layer. 3. Muscularis-consists of circular, long and oblique fibers and is smooth muscle. The myenteric plexus, a network of axons that branch from the Vagus nerve X, are found between the layers of the muscularis. Peristalsis, wave like contractions, occur in this layer. 4. Serosa-portions of the GI tract suspended in the abdominopelvic cavity. Secretes a slippery, watery fluid that allows the tract to slide against other organs. Serosa is composed of simple squamous epithelium and areolar connective tissue and is part of the visceral peritoneum. There is a mechanical and chemical digestion that occurs. By way of peristaltic movements food is mixed in the stomach (mixing bag), these contractions allow the contact with HCl(hydrochloric acid). Specialized parietal cells, located in the mucosa, are plentiful with the enzyme carbonic anhydrase, this enzyme catalyzes the formation of carbonic acid,H2CO3, from water, H2O, and carbon dioxide, CO2. As it dissociates it provides a source of the H+ for proton pumps and generates the bicarbonate ions, HCO3, which after it builds up in the cytosol, will exchange for Cl- in the exchanger. Pumps powered by ATP actively transport H+ and K+ into the lumen of the stomach from the mucosa. The K+ will diffuse back into the mucosa while the H+ will free float in the lumen, at the same time Cl - will diffuse through Cl channels in to the lumen and free float in the lumen. The free floating H+ and Cl- bind HCl. Chief Cells, located in the mucosa, secrete pepsinogen, which is inactive so it will not digest the proteins in the chief cells that produced it. Once the pepsinogen comes in contact with HCl in the gastric fluids it converts to active pepsin which break apart big proteins making them smaller fragments.
Many family members included myself are taking medication to reduce stomach acids. I take Pepcid AC daily. Pepcid AC works by blocking a specific histamine receptor in the stomach. In the stomach histamine can cause the production of more acid, Pepcid AC reduces the amount of acid produced.

Saturday, March 21, 2009

Blood

The average adult male and pregnant females have 6 liters of blood, the average non pregnant female has 5 liters. Blood consists of Red Blood Cells(RBC), White Blood Cells(WBC), and Platelets. RBC’s transport oxygen atoms. The cycle of a RBC is 90-120 days. There are 5 categories of White Blood cells (WBC) aka Leukocytes: Neutrophils whose function is phagocytosis, make up 60-70% of all WBC’s, lymphocytes whose function mediate immune response make up 20-25% of all WBC’s, monocytes function is macrophage, they make up 3-8% of all WBC’s, eosinophils function is the combat the effects of histamine in allergic reactions and destroy certain parasitic worms they make up 2-4% of all WBC’s, and basophils which liberate heparin, histamine, and serotonin in allergic reactions, they make up .5-1% of all WBC’s. The WBC’s that end in -phil have granules in the cytoplasma, these granules are histamine. WBC’s that end in -cytes do not have granules. Platelets are cell fragments that live for 5-9days and they release chemicals that promote blood clotting. RBC’s and platelets do not have a nucleus, WBC’s have nucleus which may be multilobed, bilobed, round or kidney shaped.
Blood tests are used to determine how organs with in the body are functioning. Diabetes is monitored by the levels of glucose in the blood. I think of the bloodstream as a super highway in the human blood. This superhighway is transporting the gases essential to live, and it transports nutrients needed to sustain homeostasis.

Sunday, March 8, 2009

Adrenal Cortex Layers

The 3 layers of the Adrenal Cortex are: zona glomerulosa, zona fasciculate, and the zona reticularis. Zona glomerulosa is the superficial layer. It primarily produces alderstone. Alderstone is a steroidal hormone that helps increase the volume of fluid in the body. The increase of fluid will increase the blood pressure. Zona fasciculate is the middle layer. It primarily produces cortisone. Cortisone is a immune suppressant. Prolonged stress will cause cortisone to increase and therefore the immune system will lower. Cortisone is non polar therefore it will not moving easily through the body. The zona reticularis is the deepest layer. It produces androgens. Androgens are steroidal hormones that aid in the development of masculine characteristics. The most well known androgen is testosterone, which is the male sex hormone. Androgens are also the precursor for estrogen, the female sex hormone. Cholesterol is the base for synthesis of these hormones produced in the adrenal cortex.
Upon researching cholesterol further to find out which foods are better for a person to consume. Animal fats have lower cholesterol and more triglycerides which may contribute to heart disease. Human breast milk has a high level of cholesterol and vegetables do not have any unless it is prepared with something that contains cholesterol. Limiting trans fats can help lower the risk of plaque build up in the walls of arteries.