Exchange in, and control of, the Peripheral Circulation Flashcards

1
Q

What is the function of capillaries ?

A

They are specialised for exchange

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2
Q

What are some properties of capillaries ?

A
There are lots of them:
	- Every tissue within 100mm 
They are thin-walled:
	- Presents a small diffusion barrier 
They have a small diameter:
Big surface area: volume ratio
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3
Q

What are continous capillaries ?

A

No clefts or pores e.g. Brain (hence blood brain barrier)

Lefts only e.g. Muscle and most other capillaries

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4
Q

What are fenestrated capillaries ?

A

Clefts and pore e.g. Intestine and kidney, specialised for fluid exchnage

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5
Q

What are discontinous capillaries ?

A

Clefts and massive pores e.g. Liver

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6
Q

How does most exchange happen ?

A

Most exchange is via diffusion:

  • Self-regulating
  • Non-saturable
  • Non-polar substances across the phospholipid membrane
  • Polar substances through clefts/ pores
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7
Q

Where is there carrier mediated transporters ?

A

Glucose transporter in the brain

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8
Q

What is bulk flow determined by ?

A

Starlings forces:

  • Capillary hydrostatic pressure v ISF hydrostatic pressure
  • Plasma osmotic pressure v ISF osmotic pressure
  • Net filtration pressure = (HC - HIF) - (pP - pIF)
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9
Q

What is oedema ?

A

Accumulation of excess fluid

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10
Q

What can oedema be due to ?

A
Lymphatic obstruction
	 - e.g. Due to filariasis, surgery 
Raised JVP
	 - e.g. Due to ventricular failure 
Hypoproteinaemia 
	 - e.g. Due to nephrosis, liver failure, nutrition 
Increased capillary permeability 
	 - inflammation, e.g. Rheumatism
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11
Q

How is MAP calculated ?

A

MAP = CO X TPR

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12
Q

What does the arteriolar radius affect ?

A

Arteriolar radius affects through individual vascular beds, and it affects mean arterial pressure
You cannot affect one without the other

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13
Q

How can we keep the blood flow to each vascular bed sufficient and keep MAP in the right range ?

A

This is achieved by two levels of control over the smooth muscle surrounding arterioles:

- Local (intrinsic) mechanisms- concerned with meeting the selfish needs of each individual tissue 
- Central (extrinsic) mechanisms- concerned with ensuring that the total peripheral resistance (MAP) of the whole body stays in the right ball park
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14
Q

How does active hyperaemia trigger an increase in local metabolism ?

A

Increase metabolic activity causes increase in conc of metabolites
Triggers release of paracrine signal (e.g. EDRF/NO)
Cause arteriolar dilation
Increase flow to wash out metabolites
An adaption to match blood supply to the metabolic needs of that tissue

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15
Q

How does pressure autoregulation cause a decrease in perfusion pressure ?

A

Decrease MAP causes decrease flow
Metabolites accumulate
Triggers release of paracrine signal
Arterioles dilate and flow is restored to normal
An adaptation to ensure that a tissue maintains its blood supply despite changes in MAP

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16
Q

How does active hyperaemia trigger an occlusion of blood supply ?

A

This causes a subsequent increase in blood flow

An extreme version of pressure autoregulation

17
Q

What does the injury response aid ?

A

Delivery of blood born leukocytes etc to injured area

18
Q

What is the effect of sympathetic nerves on central neural control ?

A

Release noradrenaline
Binds to alpha1-receptors
Cause arteriolar constriction
Therefore decrease flow through that tissue and tends to increase TPR

19
Q

What is the effect of parasympathetic nerves on central neural control ?

A

Usually no effect

Genitalia and salivary glands are the exception

20
Q

How does adrenaline effect central hormonal control ?

A

Released from adrenal medulla
Binds to alpha1-receptors
Cause arteriolar constriction
Therefore decrease flow through that tissue and tends to increase TPR
In some tissues e.g. Skeletal and cardiac muscle, it also activates B2-receptors
Cause arteriolar dilation
Therefore increase flow through that tissue and tends to decreases TPR
Significance re exercise