Control Arterial pressure - long term Flashcards

1
Q

Why can’t baroreceptors provide information about absolute blood pressure?

A

Relationship between pressure and baroreceptor action potential firing frequency is not fixed

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2
Q

What does resetting the baroreflex allow?

A

High cardiac output to be maintained without a fall in heart rate due to systolic pressure

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3
Q

What does hypertensive cause?

A

Sensitivity of baroreceptors is reduced

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4
Q

What is the major role of the baroreflex?

A

Buffer short-term fluctuations

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5
Q

How is blood pressure regulated in the long term?

A

Maintenance of a normal extracellular fluid volume

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6
Q

How is ECF volume regulated?

A

Renal excretion of salt and water

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7
Q

What happens if blood volume decreases?

A

MAP decreases

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8
Q

What do cardiovascular mechanoreceptors control?

A

Angiotensin II
Aldosterone
Vasopressin
Natriuretic peptides

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9
Q

What does the JGA comprise of?

A

Juxtaglomerular cells, mesangial cells and macula densa

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10
Q

What is the role of the macula densa cells?

A

Detect sodium levels
secrete vasoactive agents that affect afferent arterioles

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11
Q

What is the role of the juxtaglomerular cells?

A

Sense renal pressure changes - stretch receptors
Increases renin secretion
Depend on paracrine signalling from macula densa

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12
Q

What receptors act on the juxtaglomerular cells of afferent arterioles?

A

beta 1 adrenoreceptors

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13
Q

What factors stimulate renin release?

A

Low blood pressure
Increased sympathetic activity

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14
Q

What is the enzyme that converts angiotensin 1 to angiotensin 2?

A

ACE - angiotensin converting enzyme

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15
Q

What is the role of angiotensin II?

A

Increase blood pressure (MAP)
Stimulates sympathetic vasoconstriction
Increases thirst - increases secretion of vasopressin

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16
Q

When is renal sympathetic nerve activity (RSNA) increased?

A

Arterial baroreceptors detect a fall in arterial pressure
Veno-arterial mechanoreceptors detect a fall in central blood volume

17
Q

What does increased RSNA cause?

A

Increases renin secretion
Salt and water retention by kidneys

18
Q

What does increased RSNA stimulate?

A

Afferent arteriole constriction
Reduced GFR
Adrenaline release from adrenal medulla - renin release

19
Q

What does renin release cause?

A

Noradrenaline release
Granular cells secretion
Vasoconstriction of afferent arterioles
Lower GFR
Macula densa cell secretion

20
Q

What does aldosterone stimulate?

A

Increases Na+ reabsorption in collecting ducts and distal tubule

21
Q

What does ADH stimulate?

A

Water retention by the kidneys

22
Q

What is ADH secretion enhanced by?

A

Angiotensin II
Reduced central blood volume and arterial pressure

23
Q

What are natriuretic peptides produced by?

A

Some atrial and ventricular myocytes in response to increased blood volume

24
Q

What do natriuretic peptides stimulate?

A

Na+ excretion
Vasodilation

25
Q

What are two types of natriuretic peptides?

A

Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)
Brain natriuretic peptide (BNP)

26
Q

How do natriuretic peptides enhance renal salt and water excretion?

A

Afferent arteriole dilation
inhibition of Na+ reabsorption
inhibition of renin and aldosterone secretion

27
Q

What happens in renal artery stenosis?

A

Blood supply decreased
Blood flow is decreased
less oxygen due to atherosclerosis

28
Q

What does renal artery stenosis cause?

A

Renin secretion -> hypotension