The Cardiac Cycle & the Pathway of Blood (AQA GCSE Physical Education (PE))

Revision Note

Naomi Holyoak

Expertise

Biology

The Cardiac Cycle & the Pathway of Blood

  • The cardiac cycle is:

All of the events taking place within a single heartbeat

  • Each cardiac cycle contains the following events:

    • Diastole

      • The heart muscle relaxes and the chambers fill with blood

    • Systole

      • The muscle walls of the heart chambers contract and blood is forced out

        • Atrial systole forces blood out of the atria and into the ventricles

        • Ventricular systole forces blood out of the ventricles and into the arteries

      • Note that during systole the left and right-hand sides of the heart contract at the same time

Cardiac cycle diagram

Heart diagram showing the muscle contraction and direction of blood flow during atrial systole, ventricular systole and diastole

During diastole the heart muscle relaxes and during systole the heart muscle contracts

Pathway of blood through the heart

  • Blood travels through the chambers of the heart during a single cardiac cycle as follows:

Blood pathway table

Stage of cardiac cycle

Right

Left

Diastole

Deoxygenated blood from the body enters the right atrium via the vena cava

Oxygenated blood from the lungs enters the left atrium via the pulmonary vein

Atrial systole

Blood is forced from the right atrium into the right ventricle

Blood is forced from the left atrium into the left ventricle

Ventricular systole

Blood is forced from the right ventricle, through the pulmonary artery, to the lungs where gas exchange occurs

Blood is forced from the left ventricle into the aorta, which carries blood to the rest of the body

Blood pathway diagram

The Human Heart, downloadable AS & A Level Biology revision notes

Blood flows through the left and right sides of the heart at the same time

The role of valves

  • Valves inside the heart prevent the backflow of blood between the ventricles and the atria, and between the arteries and the ventricles

  • Valves open due to pressure differences between the different areas of the heart

    • E.g. when the atria contract the pressure in the atria is higher than the pressure in the ventricles; the valves between the atria and ventricles are forced open

  • Valves also close due to pressure differences:

    • E.g. when the ventricles contract the pressure in the ventricles is higher than the pressure in the atria; this forces the valves between the atria and the ventricles to close, preventing backflow

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Naomi Holyoak

Author: Naomi Holyoak

Naomi graduated from the University of Oxford with a degree in Biological Sciences. She has 8 years of classroom experience teaching Key Stage 3 up to A-Level biology, and is currently a tutor and A-Level examiner. Naomi especially enjoys creating resources that enable students to build a solid understanding of subject content, while also connecting their knowledge with biology’s exciting, real-world applications.