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The Heart Essay Research Paper The HeartIntroductionYou

The Heart Essay, Research Paper

The Heart

Introduction

You need your heart for all your body needs. It pumps about 2000

gallons of blood a day. It takes about 20 seconds for blood to reach every

cell in the body. An artery carries blood out from the heart. A vein carries

blood back to the heart. An average adult heart weighs about 10-13 ounces (300

to 350 grams). The rate which the heart pumps varies depending on what your

doing. When at rest the heart pumps more slowly. When you run the heart rate

increases to provide muscles and other tissues with additional oxygen they need.

The typical heart rate is 72 beats per minute. Each beat gives out 2-3 ounces

of blood pumped into the arterial system. At this heart rate it beats about

104,000 times a day. The Superior and Inferior are the biggest veins in the

body. The Superior is really the biggest. These veins have a lot of carbon

dioxide and have oxygen-poor blood. The aorta is the biggest artery in the

whole body. Which will be covered in the report. The pulmonary vein takes the

blood out of the heart and takes it to the lungs.

Today we will talk about many different parts of the heart: The Three

Layers of Muscle, Atriums, Ventricles, Systole and Diastole, Treatments for the

Heart, Valves, and many Diseases.

The Three Layers of Muscle

The heart has three layers of a muscular wall. A thin layer of tissue,

the pericardium covers the outside, and another layer, the endocardium, lines

the inside. The myocardium is the middle layer and is the biggest of all.

Myocardial Infarction is a disease later read about in this report. The

pericardium is a fibrous sac which is very smooth lining. In the space space

between the pericardium and epicardium is a small amount of fluid. This fluid

makes the movement of the heart muscles smooth. Myocardium is the heart muscle

itself.

Atriums

The right atrium is a low pressure pump that moves blood into the right

ventricle through the tricuspid valve. The atria are the two upper chambers of

the heart. The right atrium receives blood from the veins which is low in

oxygen and high in carbon dioxide; this blood is then transferred to the right

lower chamber, or right ventricle, and is pumped into the lungs.

Ventricles

The ventricle is a muscular chamber that pumps blood out of the heart

and into the circulatory system.

Right Ventricle

The right ventricle has a thicker and stronger muscular wall than the

right atrium. The right ventricle pumps the oxygen-poor blood through the

pulmonic valve into the lungs where blood gives up carbon dioxide it has

carried from tissues. At the same time blood absorbs oxygen. From the lungs

pumping action moves blood to a receiving chamber on the other side of the

heart. The left atrium, gently pumps the blood to the left ventricle through

the mitral valve.

Left Ventricle

The left ventricle gives a powerful pumping action to send the oxygen

enriched in blood into the aorta. The aorta is the principal artery which

subdivides and delivers the blood to the body’s tissues including brain, organs,

and extremities.

Systole and Diastole

Systole is the contraction of the ventricles of the heart which forces

blood out. Diastole is the relaxation of ventricles to allow blood to enter.

Treatments for the Heart

Angioplasty is a technique used to clear arteries that have become

blocked with fatty deposits. Angiography is used to x-ray the blood vessels.

Valves

In the heart there are two valves that prevent backflow of blood from

the ventricles into the atria. On the right side of the heart is the tricuspid

valve, composed of three flaps of tissue; on the left is the two-piece mitral

valve.

DISEASES

Congenital Disorders

Range of minor to serious congenital disorders are very evident at or

shortly after birth.

Ventricular Septal Defect

Ventricular Septal Defect is most common for heart malformation. An

infant born with a defect has an opening between the lower chambers (ventricles)

of its heart so there is an increased blood flow from the left side to the

right side because the left side has more pressure than right side. The lungs

at this state are under very high in pressure. Treatment for this disease

depends on it size of defect. About 30%-50% of small defects close

spontaneously during the first year of life.

Artrial Septal Defect

Atrial Septal defect is a opening which is high in the heart between the

upper chambers (atria). This disease is more common in female infants than in

male infants, and it often occurs with children who have Down syndrome.

Disorders of Heart Rate and Rhythm

The control mechanism for heart rate involves electrical impulses. One

of the four chambers, right atrium, contains group cells called sinus node.

The sinus node acts as a pacemaker, which produces electrical impulses that

signal the muscle of the heart to expand and to contract in the pumping cycle.

The heart rate of a human can get up to 200 beats a minute if you exert

yourself. If something goes wrong with the sinus node and normal pacing of

heart is disturbed or bothered, one of a number of rhythmic disorders can

happen. Too rapid or fast of a heartbeat is called tachycardia, and too slow of

a heartbeat is called bradycardia. The heart can also be affected by tobacco

or use of other drugs.

Heart Arrhythmias

Here are some signs of this disease: None, skipped heartbeats, light-

headedness, chest discomfort, and shortness of breath. If the rhythm of heart

beat is disturbed problem is arrhythmia. You maybe unaware of the problem.

Heart Murmurs

Heart murmurs can be heard by a physician as a soft hissing sound which

follow the normal sounds of heart action. Heart murmurs can tell you if that

blood is leaking out through a valve and can signal a serious heart problem.

Heart murmurs can sometimes fix themselves.

Myocardial Infarction

Myocardial infarction is a disease of myocardium muscle in the heart.

Heart muscle and it’s linings can get a disease for instance myocardial

infarction. You might not have done anything wrong even though, but it still

could happen. Myocardium gets blood from the coronary artery. When not enough

blood reaches the this muscle it is called myocardial infarction. It is

usually rare, but it can damage the heart muscle very badly.

Cardiomyopathy

Here are some signs for this disease: short times of fast heartbeats,

breathlessness, weakness, chest pain, fainting, and fluid retention. Fluid

retention is also known as redema. Redema means swelling of body tissues due

to excessive fluid. When the muscle of the heart is damaged or defective it

could led to a disease known as cardiomyopathy. This could happen by bacteria

or enlargement of the wall.

Diseases and Disorders for Heart Valves

Each valve consists of 2 or 3 thin folds of tissues. When closed valve

prevents blood from flowing to the next chamber or from returning from the

previous one. When a valve opening is narrowed and flow through is limited,

the condition is stenosis. Each valve may be subject to stenosis or

obstruction. In some cases a valve will lose its shape or sag (prolapse) or

fail to close which causes a back flow of blood (regurgitation) could also be

caused by infection or congenital problems.

Tachycardia

Tachycardia occurs normally during and after exercise or during stress

and represents no danger to healthy individuals. In some cases, however,

tachycardia occurs without apparent cause.The heart can beat as many as 240

times per minute in tachycardia. Tachycardia can be ended by lying down.

Vascular System and Diseases of It

The vascular system consists of blood vessels in the body. The vessels

become smaller as they extend farther from the heart. The aorta delivers its

flow to large arteries into smaller vessels. Arterioles supply tiny

capillaries which nourish tissues. Oxygen is going from the capillaries to the

tissues, and carbon dioxide from tissues taken up into the capillaries.

Arteries have to be strong as well as flexible because of the pressure of the

blood being pumped through the venous system. Veins get bigger when they get

closer to the heart.

Disorders of Blood Vessels

A disease or a disorder for the blood vessels can be fatal.

Coronary Artery Disease

The coronary arteries supply and maintain the myocardium. Coronary

artery disease can cause a heart attack or hypertension when blood vessels get

small or filled up with cholesterol, scar tissue, or calcium. Other problems

can happen also. For instance disorders for the heart valves or for the heart

muscle and pericardium.

Conclusion

The heart is something you need every day you can’t live with out it.

Exercise, eat a balanced diet, and always have checkups. People don’t think a

checkup will really do anything, but believe it because it will. You might not

know you have something wrong with your heart or something else in your body and

then you might get ill. So, don’t eat junky foods too often. Keep your heart

safe and healthy as long as you can. Today I have talked about the heart and

many other things as well such as the diseases of the heart, the vascular system,

and more.