❤️ Cardiac Cycle & Haemodynamics
Cardiac output, Frank-Starling law, preload vs afterload, and the Wiggers diagram — the core cardiovascular physiology for MRCS.
Cardiac Output — The Fundamental Equation
Cardiac output (CO) is the volume of blood ejected by the heart per minute. It is the product of heart rate and stroke volume — and every clinical intervention aimed at improving cardiac function targets one or both of these components.
Cardiac Output (L/min) = Heart Rate (beats/min) × Stroke Volume (mL/beat)
Normal values: CO = 70 bpm × 70 mL = ~5 L/min
Cardiac Index (CI) = CO / Body Surface Area (BSA) — normalises for body size. Normal: 2.5–4.0 L/min/m²
CI <2.2 L/min/m² = cardiogenic shock threshold
Determinants of Cardiac Output
| Determinant | Effect on CO | Clinical Modifiers |
|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | ↑HR → ↑CO (up to a point — at very high rates, diastole too short to fill adequately → ↓SV) | Sympathetic (↑), vagal (↓), beta-blockers (↓), atropine (↑), arrhythmias, fever (↑), hypothyroidism (↓) |
| Preload (EDV) | ↑ preload → ↑ SV (Frank-Starling mechanism — up to optimal point) | Venous return, fluid status, posture, haemorrhage, venodilators (nitrates reduce preload) |
| Afterload (SVR) | ↑ afterload → ↓ SV (heart works against higher resistance → less ejected) | Hypertension, aortic stenosis ↑ afterload. ACE inhibitors, vasodilators reduce afterload. |
| Contractility (inotropy) | ↑ contractility → ↑ SV at any given preload. Shifts Frank-Starling curve upward. | Sympathetic stimulation (↑), catecholamines (↑), digoxin (↑), beta-blockers (↓), heart failure (↓), acidosis (↓) |
Fick Principle — Measuring CO
Fick Principle
CO = O₂ consumption / (arteriovenous O₂ difference)
CO = VO₂ / (CaO₂ − CvO₂)
Gold standard for CO measurement (thermodilution via pulmonary artery catheter also widely used clinically). The Fick principle states that the amount of O₂ consumed by the body per minute equals the CO multiplied by the difference in O₂ content between arterial and venous blood. Mixed venous saturation (SvO₂) normally ~75% — falls in low CO states as tissues extract more O₂.