cardiac output Flashcards

1
Q

CO equation

A

CO = HR X SV; amount of blood pumped by heart per min

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2
Q

how is peripheral resistance decreased?

A

resistance from sympathetic stimulation (releases NE and E which bind to alpa-adrenergic receptors and cause vasoconstriction)–> gives rise to transient ischemia (loss of blood flow); adenosine (metabolite) generated during TI causes vasodilation; known as metabolic autoregulatory phenomena

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3
Q

Metabolic autoregulatory phenomena then lead to a reduction in total peripheral vascular resistance

A

ya

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4
Q

SV eq’n

A

SV = EDV-ESV; EDV normally 120 mL, ESV normally 50 mL–> normal SV is 70 mL

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5
Q

ejection fractin eq’n

A

is a measure of ventricular pumping efficiency

Where EF = SV / EDV

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6
Q

what are the factors that can influence SV?

A

preload (related to EDV); afterload (wall stress to the ventricles); contractility (inotropy)

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7
Q

what is preload affected by?

A

the degree of stretching of the cardiac myocytes prior to contraction and therefore related to the sarcomere length at the end of diastole

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8
Q

how else can preload be defined?

A

Can be defined as the end diastolic circumferential ventricular chamber length just before the onset of the ventricular contraction

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9
Q

End-diastolic circumferential ventricular chamber length is directly related to the end diastolic ventricular blood volume (LVEDV)
Preload is also indirectly related to ventricular end diastolic pressure (LVEDP)

A

ya

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10
Q

how is preload related to SV?

A

proportionally; increase in PL causes an increase in SV

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11
Q

what is preload determined by?

A

ventricular compliance; venous return; length tension relationship; HR (to a lesser extent)

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12
Q

what is ventricular compliance?

A

Compliance is defined as the change in
volume divided by the change in pressure i.e.) ΔV / ΔP = compliance
Or ΔP / ΔV = stiffness

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13
Q

what is the venous return?

A

amount of blood returning from systemic circulation to the heart

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14
Q

what happens when venous return increases?

A

–>stretches the myocytes
–>increases force of contraction
–>higher SV
(Frank-Starling mechanism
or Starling’s law–↑ LVEDP (↑ venous return) ↑ SV)

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15
Q

what does the FS mechanism ensure?

A

the outputs of both the ventricles are matched over time and to prevent the shifting of blood between pulmonary and systemic circulations

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16
Q

describe the length tension relationship

A

Length-tension relationship is the biophysical basis for the Starling’s law of the heart
Changes of the initial length of a myocyte (preload) could affect the contractile force (tension) being developed by that muscle
When the cardiac myocytes is stimulated at the increased preload, there will be a larger increase in active tension