Lecture 10 2/2/24 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the characteristics of systemic circulation?

A

-“greater” circulatory system
-supplies more areas
-greater pressure and resistance
-oxygenated blood enters heart via pulmonary veins and leaves via aorta

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2
Q

What are the characteristics of pulmonary circulation?

A

-“lesser” circulatory system
-deoxygenated blood enters right atrium via vena cavae
-exits via main pulmonary artery to go to lungs
-blood only flows through pulmonary system before returning to heart

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3
Q

What are the roles of pulmonary circulation?

A

-accept all blood pumped from right ventricle
-perfuse alveolar capillaries
-participate in gas exchange

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4
Q

What are the characteristics of bronchial circulation?

A

-branch of systemic circulation
-involves bronchoesophageal and bronchial arteries
-provides nutritional supply to lungs/resp. tissue
-does not participate in pulmonary gas exchange

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5
Q

What are the characteristics of coronary circulation?

A

-coronary arteries arise from aorta
-thebesian veins drain the myocardium
-supplies heart muscle with blood/oxygen

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6
Q

How do the arteries differ throughout the pulmonary system?

A

-main pulmonary arteries near bronchi are elastic
-smaller arteries near bronchioles and alveolar ducts are muscular

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7
Q

What are the characteristics of pulmonary capillaries?

A

-dense, mesh-like network
-not all are perfused at rest

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8
Q

What are the characteristics of pulmonary veins?

A

-thin-walled
-carry oxygenated blood
-distend to provide reservoir of blood for left ventricle
-can accommodate sudden increases in volume

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9
Q

What are the characteristics of absolute intravascular pressure?

A

-pressure inside of the vessel as compared to atmospheric pressure
-combination of hydraulic pressure and hydrostatic pressure
-typical “blood pressure”

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10
Q

What is driving pressure?

A

-difference between two pressures inside a blood vessel
-responsible for blood flow
-primarily hydrostatic pressure

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11
Q

What is transmural pressure?

A

difference in pressure across the vessel wall

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12
Q

What are the two mechanisms that lead to increased transmural pressure and vessel dilation?

A

-blood volume increases, causing pressure within vessel to increase
-lung inflates, causing pressure outside vessel to go down

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13
Q

What percent of systemic pressure is seen in the pulmonary system?

A

10%

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14
Q

What are the characteristics of pulmonary vascular resistance?

A

-low at rest
-pressure spread over a large thin sheet of pulmonary capillaries

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15
Q

What happens during exercise that changes pulmonary vascular resistance?

A

-cardiac input increases
-blood flow through pulmonary vasculature increases
-pulmonary blood vessels dilate

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16
Q

How can changes in blood vessel usage decrease pulmonary vascular resistance?

A

-recruitment of more vessels
-distension of vessels

17
Q

What can lead to dilation of pulmonary blood vessels besides exercise?

A

-release of nitric oxide from endothelium, which relaxes smooth muscle
-passive dilation due to increased intravascular pressure

18
Q

Why is hydrostatic pressure and perfusion less important in quadrupeds compared to bipeds?

A

most of the lung tissue in quadrupeds is dorsal to the heart/pulmonary artery

19
Q

What is the goal of hypoxic vasoconstriction?

A

shunt blood away from alveoli that do not have appropriate oxygenation

20
Q

What can cause pulmonary hypertension?

A

-chronic hypoxia
-increased blood flow from right heart
-obstructions
-chronic increases in pulmonary venous pressure

21
Q

What are the clinical signs associated with pulmonary hypertension?

A

-syncope
-exercise intolerance
-resp. distress
-cyanosis

22
Q

What changes occur within the heart due to pulmonary hypertension?

A

-hypertrophied right ventricle
-flattened interventricular septum
-pulmonary artery enlargement