Cardiac Output
Cardiac Output
CARDIAC OUTPUT
• Cardiac output is the amount of blood ejected from each ventricle in each minute\
• Factors depend : stroke volume and heart rate
• If there any variations in this factors will affect the cardiac output
• Normal value : 5-6 litres
Stroke volume
• It is the amount of blood pumped from each ventricle in a beat
• Normal value : 60-80 ml
Heart rate
• Heart rate is the number of heartbeats per minute.
• It is the major determinant of cardiac output
• Normal value : 72 beats/min
Variations in cardiac output
1. Physiological variations
2. Pathological variations
Physiological variations
d) Emotions : Adr release will increase the cardiac output, heart rate and force of
contraction of heart
Fever
• Cardiac output increases
• Two reasons for increase in CO during fever
2. Due to some infections there will be a chance or fever, to destroy the bacterias
on infected site more WBC are needed. So that there is need for increase in
blood flow. During this period heart rate increases and automatically cardiac
output increases
Anaemia
• The decrease in RBC count or decrease in Hb count is called anaemia
• During anemic condition cardiac output increased.
leads to increase in heart rate for reaching the blood to the lungs to increase the
oxygen demand
respiratory activities .
Pathological variations
• Cardiac output decreased during hypothyroidism, heart failure, shock,
hemorrhage
Factors maintaining cardiac output
Venous Return
It is the amount od blood returned to the heart from different parts of the body is
• If amount of blood t the heart increases, stroke volume increases and cardiac
1. Respiratory pump
2. Muscle pump
3. Gravity
4. Venous pressure
5. Sympathetic tone
Muscle pump
Muscular activities that helps return the blood back to the heart
Blood flow from the down part of the leg so the Valves opens in upward direction so that blood
moves to next part
• Skeletal muscles movement occurs during exercise or any other body movements leads into
the increase in circulation
• Valves in veins opens in upward direction
• From lower parts of the body blood moves or the blood reaches to the muscle parts.
• When muscles relaxed : the space inside the veins also relaxed.
• When muscles contracted: veins inside the muscles get compressed or get squeezed, the
valve in veins opens into upward direction. The blood inside the vein squirting back to heart
Respiratory pump
• Respiration is the process of taking in fresh air and exhalation of the used air.
• Respiratory activity that helps return of the blood back to the heart during
inspiration
• It is also called abdomino - respiratory pump
• During inspiration the blood will reaches to the heart
The blood to inferior venacava in thoracic area due to the movement of diaphragm
( during inspiration, diaphragm move and it will compressed in area of abdominal cavity )
The blood from this region reaches to the dilated area of inferior venacava in thoracic area
heart
Venous pressure
• Increases in the pressure inside the veins leads to increase in venous return
Sympathetic Tone
• Causes venoconstriction
of the blood vessels and heart, Pushes blood to the heart and so venous return
increases
Gravity
• Reduces venous return in standing posture : cause polling of the blood in the
legs called venous pooling so the amount of blood returning the heart
decreases.
Force of contraction of Heart
It depends upon
a) Diastolic period
b) Ventricular filling
proportional to the initial length of the muscle fibre before the onset of
contraction
• The force of contraction also depends upon the preload and afterload
• Preload is the stretching of the muscle fibres at the end of the diastole just before
contraction
• Afterload is the force against which the ventricles must contract and eject the
blood
Peripheral resistance
Peripheral resistance : resistance offered to the blood flow at the peripheral blood
vessels
resistance
• Cardiac muscles are self excitable and autorhythmic and the autorhythmicity done
Normally the heart has complete freedom to produce the heart beat rhythmically
own its own. If this limit exceeds i.e, during tachycardia and bradycardia SA node and
AV node is unable to maintain the heart rate to normal condition. The brain is then
3 components
• This area will increase heart rate and blood pressure (i.e, increases the cardiac
activities)
Vasodilator area
• This area will decrease heart rate and blood pressure (i.e, decrease the cardiac
activities)
This areas receives sensations from the heart and controls other 2 areas
Eg :
Vagus nerve
• It is connected to the vasodilator area so that controls the heart rate and blood
pressure
sympathetic nerve– connected to the vasoconstrictor area : increase heart rate and
BP
Eg: emotional time, tension, fear
autonomic nerves.
• The function of sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves is same but their action
is different
Eg : heart
control the heart rate and blood pressure to maintain in normal range
Action :
Action :
there it arises as singe nerve. When they reaches to brain it get splitted into 4 or 5
node, bundle of His, purkinji fibres). This creates a huge increase in the heart rate.
Continuous stream of inhibitory impulses arising from the vasodilatory area of the
medulla.
• This impulses arises from vasodilator area passes through parasympathetic nerve
• Heart rate is regulated by the vasomotor center by altering the vagal tone
Sensory nerve
• This receives information from the cardiac tissue and deliver to the sensory area
2. Impulses from respiratory centers-deep inspiration increases heart rate and deep
expiration decreases heart rate
• Depend upon the information reaches to the respiratory centers, heart rate will
increase or decrease
3. Impulses from baroreceptors – Marey’s reflex
4. Impulses from chemoreceptors
5. Impulses from right atrium
Baroreceptor reflex
Receptor
Baroreceptor reflex
Reflex that occur upon the stimulation of baroreceptors that respond to changes in
BP.
Increase in BP
Chemoreceptor reflex
Reflex that occur upon the stimulation of chemoreceptors that respond to changes in
RA get stretched