Cardiovascular 100% GRADE A+
GUARANTEED
A patient is in cardiac and respiratory arrest. The selection of
medications to reestablish cardiac function would stimulate the
sympathetic nervous system beta1 receptors. This stimulation would
result in increased automaticity and which of the
following?
a. Increased myocardial contractility
b. Decreased left ventricular stroke work
c. Decreased myocardial oxygen consumption
d. Increased left ventricular afterload
Correct answer: a
Rationale: The sympathetic nervous system contains alpha, beta, and
dopaminergic receptors that produce various responses when stimulated.
Stimulation of beta1 receptors increases heart rate, conductivity,
and myocardial contractility. Stimulation of beta2 receptors produces
vasodilation and bronchodilation. Alpha receptors, when stimulated,
produce vasoconstriction. Stimulation of dopaminergic receptors
produces a vasodilating
effect on renal, mesenteric, coronary, and cerebral vessels.
Test-Taking Strategy: Note the helpful clue in the stem: stimulate
the sympathetic system and recall that this results in a fight-or-
flight response—the body is responding to survive. Stroke volume
would increase, so eliminate option b. Afterload would increase, but
this is due to alpha stimulation, not beta1 stimulation, so eliminate
option d. Because the heart is working faster and harder, the
myocardial oxygen consumption does increase, so eliminate option c.
Remember that the primary effects of beta1 receptors are to increase
heart rate, contractility, and rate of conduction. Choose option a. A
memory aid that also may help is this: beta 1 beta 2, 1 heart 2 lungs:
beta1 affects the heart, and beta2 affects the lungs.
A patient arrived in the emergency department with complaints of
chest pain. The 12-lead electrocardiogram shows ST segment elevation
in leads V3 and V4. Occlusion of the affected coronary artery most
likely would affect perfusion to which portion of the
conduction system?
a. Sinoatrial (SA) node
,b. Bachmann's bundle
c. Atrioventricular (AV) node
d. Bundle of His
Correct answer: d
Rationale: ST segment elevation in leads V3 and V4 indicates injury
to the anterior wall, which would occur with occlusion of the left
anterior descending (LAD) artery. In most persons, the SA node,
Bachmann's bundle, and AV node are supplied by the right coronary
artery. The bundle of His is supplied by the left anterior descending
artery. This is why an
anterior myocardial infarction may cause type II second-degree AV
block or third-degree AV heart block at the level of the bundle of
His.
Test-Taking Strategy: Note that options a, b, and c are part of the
supraventricular conduction system. They usually are supplied by the
right coronary artery. The LAD artery supplies most of the
interventricular conduction system, including the bundle of His and
the bundle branches.
Oxygen delivery (DO2) is the product of which of the following?
a. PaO2, hemoglobin, mean arterial pressure
b. SaO2, hemoglobin, cardiac output
c. SvO2, cardiac index, SaO2
d. PaO2, mean arterial pressure, SvO2
Correct answer: b
Rationale: Ninety-seven percent of oxygen is attached to the
hemoglobin molecule, so the SaO2 (arterial oxygen saturation) is a
more accurate reflection of the amount of oxygen in blood. The PaO2
represents only the 3% that is dissolved in the plasma. The lungs
must put the oxygen in the blood, the hemoglobin must carry the
oxygen, and the cardiac output is a reflection of how well the heart
is moving the blood with its hemoglobin with attached
oxygen. SvO2 (venous oxygen saturation) is a reflection of the oxygen
reserve. SvO2 is what is left over after the tissues have extracted
what they need. The mean arterial pressure is a reflection of organ
tissue perfusion pressure but does not indicate anything about the
amount of oxygen in that blood.
Test-Taking Strategy: Oxygen is delivered from the arterial end, so
choose an option that has SaO2 instead of SvO2. Also remember that
most oxygen is carried on hemoglobin. Look for SaO2 (not PaO2) and
hemoglobin. The only option with both of these is option b.
Which of the following types of block are most likely after an
anterior wall myocardial infarction (MI)?
a. Sinus block
b. Second-degree atrioventricular (AV) block, type I
, c. Second-degree AV block, type II
d. Third-degree AV block with junctional escape rhythm
Correct answer: c
Rationale: Anterior MI is caused by a left anterior descending (LAD)
artery lesion. The LAD artery supplies the bundle of His and bundle
branches, so anterior MIs may cause blocks of the bundle of His or
bundle branches. Second-degree AV block type II is a block at the
level of the bundle of His. If this patient does develop a third-
degree AV block, it would be at the level of the bundle of His, and
the only escape rhythm available below the bundle of His is a
ventricular escape rhythm.
Test-Taking Strategy: The sinus node is supplied by right coronary
artery (in 55% of people) or left coronary artery (in 45% of people),
so eliminate option a. Type I AV block, also called Wenckebach, is a
block at the AV node, and the AV node is supplied by right coronary
artery (in 90% of people) or left coronary artery (10%), so eliminate
option b. The
LAD artery supplies the bundle of His, and blocks in this area would
eliminate the possibility of junctional escape rhythms, so eliminate
option d. Choose option c.
A patient develops atrial fibrillation after abdominal surgery. Her
blood pressure falls from 110/70 mm Hg to 92/68 mm Hg. The
hypotension is related to which of the following?
a. Decrease in ventricular contractility
b. Hypovolemia
c. Mural thrombi
d. Decrease in ventricular filling
Correct answer: d
Rationale: The contribution that atrial contraction makes to
ventricular filling volume is approximately 15% to 30%. Atrial
fibrillation results in quivering but not contracting atria. The loss
of 15% to 30% of diastolic filling volume reduces cardiac output and
can have significant hemodynamic consequences. Although mural thrombi
also are a problem, they
result in an embolic phenomenon rather than a direct decrease in
cardiac output. The relationship between the development of atrial
fibrillation and the decrease in cardiac output make hypovolemia and
decrease in contractility less likely.
Test-Taking Strategy: Relate recent changes in patient status to
recent occurrences. The patient had a change in atrial function, so
select an option that results in loss of atrial contraction or
"kick." Choose option d.
A shift in the point of maximal impulse (PMI) to the fifth left
intercostal space at the anterior axillary line could be caused by