Heart Valves and Circulation

AV and semilunar valves, systemic and pulmonary circulation, and coronary circulation.

Listen: Heart Valves and Circulation

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Heart Valves and Circulation

Valve Description

Valves open and close in response to pressure changes as the heart contracts and relaxes. They ensure one-way flow of blood and prevent backflow (regurgitation).

Types of Valves

CategoryValves
Atrioventricular (AV) ValvesTricuspid valve (right), Bicuspid/Mitral valve (left)
Semilunar (SL) ValvesPulmonary valve (right), Aortic valve (left)

Atrioventricular (AV) Valves

Anchored by the fibrous skeleton and located between an atrium and a ventricle. Each consists of cusps, chordae tendineae, and papillary muscles.

How AV Valves Work:

  1. Ventricular diastole (relaxation): Papillary muscles are relaxed, chordae tendineae are slack. Blood flows from the contracting atria (higher pressure) to the relaxed ventricles (lower pressure).
  2. Ventricular systole (contraction): Ventricular pressure rises. Blood pushes the AV valves upward until their edges meet and close. Papillary muscles contract, pulling the chordae tendineae to prevent valve prolapse.
ValveLocationFunction
Tricuspid valveBetween RA and RVPrevents backflow into the RA
Mitral (Bicuspid) valveBetween LA and LVPrevents backflow into the LA

Semilunar (SL) Valves

Anchored by the fibrous skeleton and located between a ventricle and the pulmonary artery or aorta. Each consists of three crescent moon-shaped cusps.

How SL Valves Work:

  1. Ventricular diastole: Blood starts to flow back toward the heart, filling the cusps and closing the SL valves.
  2. Ventricular systole: Pressure increases, forcing the SL valves open.
ValveLocationFunction
Aortic valveBetween LV and aortaPrevents backflow into the LV
Pulmonic valveBetween RV and pulmonary arteryPrevents backflow into the RV

Circulation of Blood

The heart pumps blood through two closed circuits: systemic and pulmonary.

Systemic Circulation (Left Side)

Receives oxygenated blood from the lungs and pumps it to the body.

Route: Heart → Aorta → Arteries → Arterioles → Capillaries → Venules → Veins → Superior/Inferior Vena Cava → Heart

  • Oxygenated blood is carried away from the heart; deoxygenated blood returns
  • High pressure system

Pulmonary Circulation (Right Side)

Receives deoxygenated blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs.

Route: Heart → Pulmonary Trunk → Pulmonary Arteries → Lungs → Pulmonary Capillaries → Pulmonary Veins → Heart

  • Deoxygenated blood is carried to the lungs; oxygenated blood returns
  • Low pressure system

Major Arterial Routes (Away from Heart)

ArteryRegion Supplied
Aortic archElastic artery that distributes blood to the upper body
Carotid arteries (right and left)Oxygenated blood to the brain
Subclavian arteriesOxygenated blood to the upper limbs
Brachial arteriesMedial side of biceps brachii
Radial arteriesPosterior compartment of forearm
Ulnar arteriesAnterior compartment of forearm
Iliac arteriesOxygenated blood to the lower limbs
Femoral arteriesInferior to inguinal ligament
Popliteal arteriesPosterior to knee
Dorsalis pedisTop of foot

Major Venous Routes (Return to Heart)

VeinRegion Drained
Inferior vena cavaLargest vein (~3.5 cm diameter); returns blood from lower body to RA
Superior vena cava(~7.5 cm long, 2 cm diameter); returns blood from upper body to RA
Jugular veinsDrain deoxygenated blood from brain, face, and neck
Cephalic veinsSuperficial vein of the upper limb
Basilic veinsSuperficial vein of the upper limb

Coronary Circulation

The myocardium has its own network of blood vessels — the coronary arteries and coronary veins.

Coronary Arteries

ArteryBranchLocationRegion Supplied
Left coronary arteryAnterior interventricular (LAD)Anterior interventricular sulcusWalls of both ventricles
Circumflex branchCoronary sulcusWalls of LV and LA
Right coronary arteryPosterior interventricularPosterior interventricular sulcusWalls of both ventricles
Marginal branchCoronary sulcus (right margin)Right ventricle

Coronary Veins

VeinLocationRegion Drained
Great cardiac veinAnterior interventricular sulcusBoth ventricles and LA; area supplied by left coronary artery
Middle cardiac veinPosterior interventricular sulcusBoth ventricles; area supplied by posterior interventricular branch
Small cardiac veinCoronary sulcusRA and RV; area supplied by right coronary artery and marginal branch
Anterior cardiac veinsRight margin of heartRV

All coronary veins drain into the coronary sinus, which then empties into the right atrium.