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Final Review Bio 9G

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Title: Final Review Bio 9G


1
Final ReviewBio 9G
  • Vivian Alfonso
  • Bio Peer Tutor

2
Understanding the cell
  • Movements of ions is what drives the Action
    Potential

3
Parts of an Action Potential
4
The whole picture
5
What happens when neurotransmitters dont work
properly?
6
  • Parkinsons Disease
  • Occurs in the _______
  • Brain makes less _____
  • Tremors, muscle spasm- inability to control
    muscle movements because of a loss of dopamine
  • Treatment
  • __________________ implant electrodes/pacemaker
    and zap the brain to reset itself into making DA
    to reduce tremors
  • Myasthenia Gravis
  • Occurs in __________
  • Auto-immune attacks __________________ channels
  • Treatment
  • Give increasing amounts of _______________

7
Toxins
  • Botulinum Toxin (Botox)
  • Produces toxin when kept in anaerobic environment
  • __________________________________
  • ACh is __________________
  • _____________ muscle contraction
  • Black widow spider venom (Latrotoxin)
  • Increase number of _______________
  • More vesicles fuse, more ACh released _______
    contraction

8
Toxins cont..
  • Sarin
  • Blocks __________________ ___________ the
    breakdown of ACh _______ muscle contraction
  • Affects the Parasympathetic NS
  • Any part of the body that has parasympathetic
    activity will be affected

9
The big picture
10
Fuel for exercise
Glucose
2 Pyruvate
Lactic Acid
CO2 H2O ATP
11
Glycolysis
  • Expensive
  • Occurs in the fluid of the muscle
  • Fast
  • Glucose 2 Pyruvate

12
Cellular Respiration
  • For ____________ exercise, but ____ maximal
  • Pyruvate from glycolysis is put into mitochondria
  • Requires oxygen
  • Break down pyruvate
  • 2 Pyruvate

13
Anaerobic Fermentation
  • At high power levels
  • _____________________
  • Work faster than your blood can bring your
    muscles oxygen
  • Glucose Pyruvate
  • NAD

14
Muscle fiber types
  • Muscle Fiber Types
  • Parts of the muscle fiber
  • Mitochondria- burns oxygen to make ATP
  • Myoglobin- stores oxygen in muscle cell
  • Capillaries- carry oxygen and glucose
  • Contractile proteins
  • Muscle glucose

15
Slow Oxidative Fibers (Type 1)
  • ________________
  • Use mostly cellular respiration
  • Has slow versions of _____________
    __________________
  • Has extra mitochondria, myoglobin, capillaries

16
Fast Oxidative Fibers (Type 2a)
  • MID-LEVEL
  • Glycolysis enzymes and cellular respiration
  • Fast myosin and fast Ca2 pumps
  • Mainly stores glucose

17
Fast Glycolytic Fiber (Type 2b)
  • ___________________
  • Glycolysis enxymes
  • Fast myosin and fast Ca2 pump
  • Mostly glucose storage
  • Mainly consists of ________________ and
    _____________
  • Stains the darkest

18
Note..
  • Each muscle contains all types of muscle fiber
    types
  • Motor unit

19
Muscle recruitment
  • The first muscle type to be recruited are the
    slow-oxidative fibers (__________)
  • With prolonged exercise, fast-oxidative fibers
    (__________) are then activated next
  • Lastly, fast-glycolytic fibers are activated
    (__________)

20
Things you can do
  • You cant change your muscle fiber type 1 to 2
  • But! You can
  • Endurance train
  • Aerobic, increases O2 delivery
  • Adds myoglobin, capillaries, mitochondria
  • Type 2b ? 2a
  • Strength train
  • Max exercise to exhaustion
  • Small damage to myofibrils
  • Adds myofibrils, fuel storage bigger muscles

21
Obesity
  • Health problems that may result
  • Sleep apnia
  • Erectile dysfunction
  • High cholesterol
  • Cause of obesity
  • Eating too much
  • Genetic predispositions vary from person to
    person
  • Appetite
  • Metabolism
  • Fat storage

22
Treatment of obesity
  • Lower calorie diets and exercise
  • Drugs
  • Lipase inhibitors
  • Stimulants
  • Bariatric Surgery
  • Requires massive lifestyle change

23
Bariatric surgery
  • Gastric Bypass
  • Take proximal portion of stomach- the intestine
    is rerouted here
  • People lose weight because they physicaly cannot
    eat
  • Lap Band surgery
  • Put a collar around top portion of stomach (which
    you can adjust)
  • Reversible
  • Less invasive

24
Gastric Bypass
Lap Band
25
Midterm 1 Review
26
Key Terms
  • Artery carries blood Away from the heart
  • Vein carries blood towards the heart
  • Pulmonary lungs
  • Systole contraction
  • Diastole relaxation
  • Isovolumic same volume
  • High Pressure Low
    Pressure

27
Heart Anatomy
28
Cardiac Cycle
29
Things to note on Cardiac cycle
  • During this transition, pressure in the
    ventricles drops enough for the AV valves to open
    (pressure flows from HIGH to LOW)
  • Note which stages occur in ventricular/atria
    diastole/systole

30
Pressure Volume Curve
31
A Different View Heart Sounds
32
Mitral Valve Disorders
  • Mitral Prolapse excess bulge of AV valve due to
    tendons holding valve weakening/stretched out
  • Mitral Regurgitation ____ valve doesnt close
    properly, so _____________________ (unable to
    effectively get blood to body)
  • Mitral Stenosis AV valve is _______ blood cant
    get in to ventricle because valves dont open all
    the way- blood gets stuck __________

33
Aortic Semilunar Valve Disorders
  • Aortic Regurgitation ______________
    _______________, blood in aorta is under
    extremely high pressure stretching out aorta and
    preventing valve from closing properly-
  • BOUNDING PULSE
  • Aortic Stenosis Valve cant open well, blood
    cant flow out of ventricle

34
Signal Conduction
  • Signal for contraction is due to Na channels
  • In SA node- funny channels which open on their
    own set the pace for the heart contraction
    (100BPM)

35
Heart Conduction System
  • SA node located in the ______ __________
  • Signal is sent to ___________, and _________ so
    atria contract together (40 BPM)
  • Signal sent to _____________ then
    __________________ at APEX of heart then through
    the ventricles, after which ventricles contract
    together

36
Heart Conduction and EKG
P wave QRS wave T wave
37
EKG
P
T
QRS
38
Heart Conduction Abnormalities
  • Atrial Fibrillation
  • damage to muscle cells in atria
  • signal from SA node to AV node ________________,
    so signal is random
  • AV block
  • Atria and Ventricles beat independently
  • P wave
  • QRS wave

39
  • PVCs premature ventricular contractions
  • Irregular QRS intervals
  • Ventricular Fibrillation
  • Similar to atrial fibrillation
  • Ventricles cant get blood out of the heart
    effectively? death
  • Source of sudden death in heart attack

40
Blood vessels in body
  • Composition of blood vessels
  • Elastic tissue stretch of vessel
  • Smooth muscle contraction/relaxation
  • Fibrous tissue support
  • Arteries
  • Elastic deal with __________ pressure blood
    leaving the heart (think aorta)
  • Thick and tough (bike wheel tire)
  • Arterioles
  • Rings of smooth muscle

41
  • Capillaries
  • Location for ____________________________
  • RBCs cannot cross membrane
  • Connect to venuoles
  • Veins
  • Blood is under ________ pressure, so the walls of
    the vein are much _____________ than arteries
  • Valves

Are there valves in the veins at the level of the
heart?
NO
42
Overview
43
Compliance
Veins High compliance (stretchy)
Artery Low compliance (not so stretchy)
44
Volume versus Pressure
  • Area is inversely proportional to velocity
  • Capillaries have the largest cross sectional
    area, and have the slowest velocity
  • Veins contain the highest volume of blood

45
Midterm 2 Review
46
Review of Veins
  • Large diameter, so flow is moderate
  • But veins deal with ___________________
  • Veins have valves
  • Skeletal muscle pump
  • Muscle contraction
  • Valves

47
Blood vessel diseases
48
Atherosclerosis
  • Hardening/ thickening of artery
  • Damage
  • Inner lining of artery is ______________ in the
    blood
  • High blood pressure
  • Repair
  • Body sends _________ to the area (hardening)
  • Plaque
  • Buildup of debris under inner arterial lining

49
Atherosclerosis overview
  • This ____________ arteries, causing them to
    stiffen
  • Artery is weaker due to tissue damage
  • Plaque can break off and block smaller vessels
    down the line
  • Arteries Arterioles Capillaries

50
Coronary Artery Disease
  • Narrowing of coronary arteries by ___________
  • Moderate enough plaque to cause reduced blood
    flow to heart
  • Angina
  • Severe
  • No blood flow means that tissue will die
  • Infarct
  • Mycardial infarction

51
Coronary Artery Disease
  • You can prevent tissue death by noticing the
    symptoms
  • Coronary bypass surgery

52
Aneurysm
  • Bulge in artery,
  • 2 main kinds
  • 1. Aortic
  • 2. Cerebral
  • Note Only when it ruptures is this a problem
    (internal bleeding)

53
Stroke
  • Death of brain tissue caused by a lack of blood
  • Ischemic
  • Hemorrhagic

54
Concept map!
Ischemic Stroke
Coronary Artery Disease
Plaque
Atherosclerosis
Weakened Arterial Walls
Aneurysm
Hemorrhagic Stroke
Cerebellar
Aortic
55
Cardiac OutputThe amount of blood pumped out of
the heart per minute
  • Stroke Volume x Heart Rate

56
Heart Rate Control
  • Two factors
  • Intrinsic Control within heart ex. SA node
    100BPM
  • Extrinsic factors
  • Nerves
  • Hormones

57
Nervous system breakdown
58
Heart Rate Control
  • Parasympathetic control of heart
  • Sympathetic control of heart
  • Important to note that sympathetic and
    parasympathetic nerves come out of different
    places (physically different nerves) yet control
    the same structure

59
Extrinsic control of HR neurotransmitters
  • Both sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves end
    at the SA node

SA node
60
Quick terminology
  • Neurotransmitters molecules/chemicals that are
    released by neurons
  • Lock and key-
  • Norepinephrine (NE)
  • Acetylcholine (ACh)

61
Neurotransmitters vs Hormones
  • Hormones chemical/molecule released into blood
    stream
  • Affect distant organs and last longer (a more
    global effect)
  • Longer lasting effects
  • Wider spread message
  • Neurotransmitters released at specific
    locations, therefore only affect specific
    structures
  • Local effect

62
Extrinsic control Hormones
  • No parasympathetic hormone released to the heart
  • Sympathetic control
  • Epinephrine
  • Increases Heart rate

63
Quick terminology
  • Agonist mimics the effects of the
    chemical/molecule
  • It can bind to the same receptor as the
    chemical/molecule
  • Antagonist blocks binding or interaction of
    molecule/chemical with its respective receptor
  • Prevents the molecule from having its effects

64
Drug Modifiers of Heart Rate
  • Pilocarpine cholinergic receptor agonist
  • Atropine cholinergic receptor antagonist
  • Epinephrine adrenergic receptor agonist
  • Digitalis adrenergic receptor antagonist

65
Cardiac OutputThe amount of blood pumped out of
the heart per minute
  • Stroke Volume x Heart Rate

66
Stroke Volume Control
  • Two factors
  • Intrinsic control
  • Frank-Starling Law of the Heart
  • Stroke volume increases
  • Extrinsic control

67
Extrinsic control of SV
  • 1. Innervation of the heart muscle

68
Extrinsic control review
  • 2. Venous Return

69
Exercise
70
Exercise signals
  • 1st effect of exercise ______________
    _______________________________
  • Increased SNS increased arteriole
    vasoconstriction
  • Local factors at muscles that are working
  • Increased CO2 waste and lactic acid
  • LOCAL FACTOR EFFECT

71
Temperature Regulation in Exercise
  • SNS shuts off blood to skin during exercise
  • How do you prevent from frying your tissues?

72
Effects of Aerobic Exercise
  • 1. Hypertrophy of the heart
  • Bigger heart muscle? increased ventricular
    contraction strength? increased SV

73
  • 2. Cardiac Output
  • Train heart to have bigger SV so you can work
    out longer at higher intensity of exercise
  • 3. Heart Rate
  • 4. NS and Hormones
  • Decreases SNS at rest and Decreases epinephrine
    (adrenaline) less stress

74
Skeletal muscle
  • Note skeletal muscle is striated- one of its
    defining characteristics ?

75
Anatomy
Muscle
Muscle fiber
Myofibril
76
Components for Muscle Contraction
  • Myosin _____ filament (A Band- myosin And actin)
  • Actin _____ filament (I Band)
  • H Zone and I Band

Note troponin complex is like the GATE KEEPER-
Ca2 binds to troponin complex to move
tropomyosin away from myosin binding sites
77
Putting it all together
  • Inside the myofibril, you have contractile
    proteins

Z line
78
Basic Idea of Muscle Contraction
  • Ca2 binds to troponin complex and exposes active
    sites
  • Ca2 released from ___________________, binds to
    troponin (which is bound to tropomyosin) and
    exposes Myosin binding sites
  • Myosin binds
  • Myosin pulls
  • Myosin releases

79
Cross Bridge Cycling- Muscle contraction
  • 1. Myosin attached (just finished last pull), no
    ATP (head at 45)
  • 2. ATP binds to myosin head and it lets go of
    actin

80
  • 3. ATP is broken down to ______ and ___- which
    are still bound to myosin and myosin is not
    attached to actin
  • 4. Creation of ADP causes myosin to ______ to
    actin (crossbridge head at 90)
  • 5. Phosphate released, leaving ADP --
    ________________
  • 6. ADP falls off- myosin head is still attached

81
The big picture
82
Good Luck Studying!!
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