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When the left ventricular pressure exceeds aortic blood pressure, the aortic valve opens, allowing blood to be ejected from the left ventricle into the aorta during systole. This pressure gradient is crucial for effective blood circulation, as it facilitates the delivery of oxygenated blood to the systemic circulation. The opening of the aortic valve marks the transition from isovolumetric contraction to ventricular ejection in the cardiac cycle.

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4d ago

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In blood pressure readingsystolic pressure is most closely associated with the?

Ventricular contraction. When ventricular pressure exceeds arterial pressure, the ventricles contract and eject blood into the aorta.


During which phase of the cardiac cycle do the ventricles of the heart contract?

There are many phases of the cardiac cycle- in total five stages occur. phase 1) - Isovolumetric ventricular contraction In response to ventricular depolarization, tension in the ventricles increases. The rise in pressure within the ventricles leads closure of the mitral and tricuspid valves. The pulmonic and aortic valves stay closes during the entire phase. 2) ventricular ejection: When ventricular pressure exceeds aortic and pulmonary arterial pressure 80MMHG- the aortic and pulmonic valves open and the ventricles eject 70% of the blood. 3) Isovolumetric relaxation: when ventricular pressure falls below pressure in the aorta and pulmonary artery, the aortic and pulmonic valves close. All valves are closed during this phase. Atrial diastole occurs as blood fills the atria.4) ventricular filling: atrial pressure exceeds ventricular pressure which causes the mitral and tricuspid valves to open. Blood then flows passively into the ventricles. About 70% of ventricular filling takes place during this phase. 5) atrial systole: known as the atrial kick, atrial systole coinciding with late ventricular diastole supplies the ventricles with the remaining blood for each heart beat. Diastole: This occurs in-between heartbeats to allow blood to refill the heartSystole: when the atria and ventricles contact For more information e-mail me: Elliottcollins@hotmail.co.uk I also have a VERY helpfull link belowHow_heart_works


Why do the coronary arteries carry a greater blood flow during ventricular diastole than they do during ventricular systole?

Because not all of the blood that is in the heart, which was brought in during diastole, is ejected during systole. There is some back flow of blood, which can't make it over the aortic arch because of lack of pressure, into the heart.


Pressure of the blood coming out of the heart?

This pressure is termed the aortic pressure.


Is the heart always pumping blood when pressure in the left ventricle is rising?

No when pressure in the left ventricle first rises, the heart is contracting but no blood is leaving the heart. During this initial phase of contraction, bother the AV valves and the semilunar valves are closed. The increase in the pressure is the result of increased tension as the cardiac muscle contracts. When the pressure in the ventricle exceeds the pressure in the aorta, the aortic semilunar valves are forced open, and blood is rapidly ejected from the ventricle.


When does the pulmonary semilunar valve open?

The two semilunar valves are the aortic valve and the pulmonic valve. The aortic valve opens when the left ventricle contracts, allowing blood to pass into the aorta. The pulmonic valve opens when the right ventricle contracts, allowing blood to pass into the pulmonary artery.


Does increasing arterial blood pressure increases blood flow?

YES! Changes in blood volume affect arterial pressure by changing cardiac output. An increase in blood volume increases central venous pressure. This increases right atrial pressure, right ventricular end - diastolic pressure and volume. This increase in ventricular preload increases ventricular stroke volume by the Frank - Starling mechanism. An increase in right ventricular stroke volume increases pulmonary venous blood flow to the left ventricular, thereby increasing left ventricular preload and stroke volume. An increase in stroke volume then increases cardiac output and arterial blood pressure. answered by HappyNess0423


Is the blood pressure in systemic arteries greatest during atrial systole or ventricular systole?

ventricular systole


The entrance to the ascending aorta is guarded by the valve?

The entrance to the ascending aorta is guarded by the aortic valve. It ensures that blood flows from the left ventricle into the aorta and prevents backflow into the heart. The aortic valve opens during ventricular contraction and closes to prevent blood from flowing back into the heart during ventricular relaxation.


What conditions can be revealed by cardiac catheterization?

enlargement of the left ventricle; ventricular aneurysms (abnormal dilation of a blood vessel); narrowing of the aortic valve; insufficiency of the aortic or mitral valve; and septal defects


What are the conditions where you get 0 diastolic blood pressure?

aortic regurgitation


Pressure in the aorta is greatest during what?

The pressure in the aorta is greatest during ventricular systole, which is when the heart contracts and pumps blood into the aorta. This creates a surge in pressure that is known as systolic blood pressure.