CVS Session 6 (Lecture 6.1) Flashcards

1
Q

What factors increase arterial pressure and determine it?

A

Increased cardiac output and increased TPR

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2
Q

What factors determine pressure in veins?

A

Rate at which blood enters and rate at which heart pumps it out

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3
Q

What occurs if CO remains constant and TPR falls to arterial and venous pressure?

A

AP - Falls

VP - Increases

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4
Q

What occurs if CO remains constant and TPR rises to arterial and venous pressure?

A

AP - Increases

VP - Falls

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5
Q

What occurs if TPR remains constant and CO rises to arterial and venous pressure?

A

AP - Increases

VP - Falls

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6
Q

What occurs if TPR remains constant and CO falls to arterial and venous pressure?

A

AP - Falls

VP - Increases

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7
Q

What is TPR inversely proportional to?

A

Body demand for blood

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8
Q

What is meant by demand-led pumping? How is it expressed?

A

If the body needs more blood, the heart pumps more to meet the demand.

Expressed as changes in arterial and venous pressure

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9
Q

What is stroke volume the difference between?

A

End diastolic volume - End systolic volume

remember heart fills in diastole

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10
Q

What is the intra-ventricular pressure equal to? Explain?

A

Equal to venous pressure as during diastole the ventricles fill, so are reliant on the venous pressure. The higher the venous pressure the more the heart fills.

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11
Q

Describe the ventricular compliance curve? Draw it out.

A

Relationship between venous pressure and ventricular volume.

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12
Q

What is Starling’s law?

A

The more the heart fills in diastole, the harder it contracts so the bigger the SV as the ventricular walls are stretched.

Rises in VP lead to increased SV

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13
Q

What is the Starling curve? Draw it

A

Relates SV to venous pressure

Slope is the contractility of the ventricle (not same as FOC)

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14
Q

What occurs at the top, flat portion of the graph?

A

Heart cannot stretch anymore due to pericardium holding the heart in place. This decreases the FOC

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15
Q

What affects the end systolic volume?

A

How hard the heart contracts

How hard it is to eject

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16
Q

What determines the FOC? How is contractility increased?

A

End diastolic volume and contractility

Increased by sympathetic activity

17
Q

If it is harder to eject blood into the arteries what will the AP do?

A

Rise

18
Q

If it easier to eject blood in systole, what occurs to AP, ESV and SV

A

AP - falls
ESV - falls (systolic volume)
SV - increases

19
Q

What occurs to SV if VP rises or AP falls?

A

Increases (VP is the dominant variable)

20
Q

Where is the carotid sinus? What exists there and where does it sends signals to?

A

At the bifurcation between the internal and external carotid arteries.
Baroreceptors to medulla controlling HR

21
Q

If arterial pressure falls how does the carotid sinus respond?

A

Senses fall in AP therefore increases HR by increasing sympathetic and decreasing parasympathetic sactivity to the heart.

Increases contractility by increasing sympathetic activity.

22
Q

If venous pressure falls how does the heart respond?

A
Increased VP
Sensed in RA
Lead to reduced PS activity
Rise in HR
Bainbridge reflex