Lecture 5: Blood Vessels & Hemodynamics Flashcards

1
Q

what is capillary exchange

A

many molecules pass by diffusion between blood and interstitial fluid while moving down thier concentration gradients

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2
Q

what are the 4 routes of crossing a capillary

A
  1. diffusion thorugh plasma membrane (lipid-soluble substances ex. fats) (high[]->low[] until=)
  2. movement thorugh intercellular clefts (water-soluble substances)
  3. movement through fenestrations (water-soluble substances)
  4. transport via vesicles (large substances ex. proteins) (bulk transport)
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3
Q

what is bulk flow of fluid movements

A

-fluid is forced out of clefts of capillaries at arterial end, and most returns to blood at venous end (extremely important in determining relative fluid volumes in blood and interstitial space
-bulk fluid flow across capillary walls causes continuous mixing of fluid between plasma and interstitial fluid (maintains interstitial environment)

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4
Q

what does direction and amiunt of fluid flow depend on (bulk flow)

A

it depends on two opposing forces
-blood hydrostatic pressures (BHP)
-blood colloid osmotic pressures (BCOP)

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5
Q

what is hydrostatic pressure

A

the force applied by fluid pressing against wall
there are two types; capillary blood hydrostatic pressure & interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure

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6
Q

what are the two types of hydrostatic pressure and explain them

A
  1. Capillary blood hydrostatic pressure (BHP): capillary blood pressure that tends to force fluids through capillary walls into interstitial fluid (ISF) -> filtration. it is greater at the arterial end (35mmHg) of bed that at venule end (16-17mmHg)
  2. Interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure (IFHP): pressure pushing fluid back into vessel. usually assumed to be zero because lymphatic vessels drain ISF
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7
Q

what is blood colloid osmotic pressure

A

-also called “oncotic pressure, OPc”
-“sucking” pressure created by non-diffusible plasma proteins (from high [ ] to low [ ] of H2O) pulling water back into capillary
-BCOP ~26mmHg

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8
Q

what is interstitial osmotic pressure (IFOP)

A

from lymphatic vessels
-pressure is inconsequential because ISF has very low protein content
-IFOP only ~1mmHg

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9
Q

what is hydrostatic-osmotic pressure interactions

A

-net fluid flow out at arterial end-> filtration
-net fluid flow in at venous end -> reabsorption
-more fluid leaves at arterial end than is returned at venous end-> excess interstitial fluid is returned to blood via lymphatic system

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10
Q

what is net filtration pressure and how is it calculated

A

it comproses all forces acting on capillary beds
-NFP= (BHP + IFOP) - (IFHP + BCOP)
-(BHP + IFOP) promotes filtration
-(IFHP + BCOP) promotes reabsorption
-net fluid flow out at arterial end-> filtration
-net fluid flow in at venous end-> reabsorption
-more fluid leaves at arterial end than is returned at venous end which causes excess interstitial fluid is returned to blood via lymphatic system

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11
Q

net filtration occurs at the arteriolar end of a capillary

A
  1. hydrostatic pressure in capillary (HPc) “pushes” fluid out of capillary
  2. osmotic pressure in capillary (OPc) “pulls” fluid into capillary
    NFP= (HPc + OPif) - (HPif + OPc)
    positive NFP in capillary causes fluids to move from the capillary into the interstitial space
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12
Q

net reabsorption occurs at the venous end of a capillary

A
  1. hydrostatic pressure in capillary (HPc) “pushes” fluid out of capillary. the pressure has dropped because of resistance encountered along the capillaries
  2. osmotic pressure in capillary (OPc) “pulls” fluid into capillary
    NFP= (HPc + OPif) - (HPif + OPc)
    notice that the NFP at the venous end is a (-), this means that reabsorption not filtration is occuring and fluid moves from the interstitial space into the capillary
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13
Q

what are some important differences between systemic arteries and veins

A

-arteries run deep only but veins are both deep & superficial, deep veins share name with corresponding artery, superficial veins do not correspond to names of arteries
-venous pathways are more interconnected (anastamoses), veins can have more than one name making venous pathways harder to follow
-the grain and digestive systems have unique venous drainage systems, brain contains dural venous sinuses, venous system of the digestive system drains into hepatic portal system which perfuses through liver before returning to heart

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14
Q

what are the general functional patterns of vessels

A
  1. similar distribution on right and left, except near the heart
  2. change in vessel names with different anatomical positions
  3. multiple arteries and veins in tissues and organs, anastomoses (multiple interconnections) occurs
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15
Q

what are the different circulatory routes

A

-systemic circulation
-pulmonary circulation
-hepatic portal circulation
-fetal circulation
* systemic & pulmonary makes up vascular system

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16
Q

what is the pathway of blood through the heart

A

-heart consists of two side-by-side pumps
-right side: pump for pulmonary ciculation (short, low pressure circulation)
-left side: pump for systemic circulation (long, high pressure circulation)
-equal volumes of blood are pumped to pulmonary and systemic circuits

17
Q

what is systemic circulation

A

-arteries and arterioles that carry deoxygenated blood from left ventricle to capillaries, nutrients to body tissues, all arise from aorta
-veins and venules that return deoxygenated blood to right atrium, removes CO2, wastes, all drain into IVC/ SVC & coronary sinus

18
Q

what are the systemic vessels

A

-84% of blood volume
-aorta, common carotid artey, brachiocephalic artery , subclavian artery, coronary artery, azygos vein, SVC, IVC

19
Q

slide 16

A
20
Q

slide 17

A
21
Q

what is the azygos system

A

-netowrk of veins within thoracic regoin that run on either side of vertebral column
-drains most thoracic region and part of abdominal walls
-three veins: azygos vein, accessory hemiazygos veins & hemiazygos vein all empty into the SVC

22
Q

what is the clinical significance of the azygos system

A

-serves as bypass for IVC and hepatic portal system
-obstruction to IVC or hepatic portal system, blood shuttles from lower body portion to SVC via azygos system

23
Q

what is the hepatic portal system and the clinical significance

A

-connection of two capillary beds- one in gastrointestinal (GI) tract, the other in the liver
-clinical significance: nutrient-rich blood (may contain toxins and microbes) from GI organs (spleen, pancreas, gallbladder) delivered to liver sinusoids for processing, after processing in liver blood collects in hepatic veins and empties into IVC

24
Q

what is the pulmonary circulation

A

-short loop runs from heart to lungs and back to heart
-deoxygentaed blood from RV to alveoli (air sacs) in lungs
-returns oxygenated blood from lungs to LA

25
Q

slide 22

A
26
Q

what is fetal circulation

A

-structures that permit exchange of materials between fetus and mother
-non-functioning lungs, kidneys and GI organs
-exchange of O2, nutrients and CO2, wastes by diffusion from maternal blood at placenta

27
Q

what is the placenta blood supply

A

-blood flows to placenta through umbilical
-a pair of umbilical arteries
-blood returns from placenta
-a single umbilical vein that drains into ductus venosus
-empties into IVC

28
Q

what is fetal pulmonary circulation bypasses

A

-foramen ovale (interarterial opening), covered by valves-like flap, directs blood from right to left atrium
-ductus arteriosus- short vessel, connects pulmonary trunk to aorta

29
Q

slide 25

A