Sessiol 6 - Control of cardiac outout Flashcards

1
Q

What determine venous pressure?

A
  • The rate at which blood enters the veins

- The rate at which the heart pumps it out

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2
Q

At a constant CO, if TPR falls, how does this effect arterial and venous pressure?

A
  • Arterial pressure will decrease (less pressure needed to drive CO through the arteries)
  • Venous pressure will increase (The drop of pressure over arterioles has decreases/blood enters veins easier and being pumper out the same)
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3
Q

At a constant CO, if TPR rises, how does this effect arterial and venous pressure?

A
  • Arterial pressure will increase (more pressure needed to drive the CO through the arterioles)
  • VP will decrease (the large pressure drop over the arteries and blood cannot enter veins as easy, but is being pumped out at the same rate)
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4
Q

If TPR remains the same, and CO increases, what is the effect on arterial and venous pressure?

A
  • Arterial pressure will increase (more pressure needed to drive the increased CO)
  • Venous pressure will fall (decreased capacitance in the veins as CO increased/large arterial drop)
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5
Q

If TPR remains the same and CO decreases, what effect will it have on arterial and venous pressure?

A
  • Arterial pressure will decrease (less CO being pumped through same resistance -> less pressure needed)
  • Venous pressure will increase (Capacitance of veins increased)
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6
Q

How does the CVS stabilise when there is an increased CO dduring exercise?

A

-Increased CO-> increases arterial pressure and decreases venous pressure-> reduced blood flow in arteries-> increased vasodilator factors -> TPR decreases-> causes a decrease in arterial pressure and an increase in venous pressure back to normal with sustained increased CO

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7
Q

How does the CVS stabilise if there is a decrease in CO?

A

-Decrease in CO-> Decreased arterial pressure (less need for pressure) -> decreased TPR-> decreased pressure drop across arterioles -> increased venous pressure -> CO increases

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8
Q

What happens to CO, TPR, AP and VP after eating a meal and why?

A

-Eat a meal -> gut needs more blood as tissues increase metabolic activity -> increase vasodilator metabolites dilates arterioles -> decreased TPR -> decrease in AP and increase VP -> increased CO -> AP and VP maintained -> increased TPR and bodys demand decreases -> decreased CO

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9
Q

Define stroke volume

A

-The amount of blood expelled from the left ventricle per beat

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10
Q

Define end diastolic voume

A

-The amount of blood in the LV at the end of diastole

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11
Q

Define end systolic volume

A

-The amount of blood which remains in the left ventricle after systole

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12
Q

How is resting stroke volume a proportion of the maximum stroke volume?

A
  • Increasing expulsion will increase SV and decrease end systolic volume
  • Increasing end diastolic volume increases SV
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13
Q

What determines filling of the ventricles during diastole?

A

-Pressure in the veins determines the pressure in the atria which determines how much the ventricles fill

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14
Q

Why does the pressure in the veins determine ventricular filling?

A

-Filling of the ventricles occurs until the walls stretch enough to produce an intraventricular pressure equal to venous(and thus atria) pressure so the valve closes

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15
Q

What is the ventricular compliance curve?

A

-The relationship between the venous pressure and the ventricular volume

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16
Q

Define pre-load

A

-The end diastolic pressure which stretches the ventricle to its greatest dimensions ie the initial stretching of the cardiomyocytes prior to contraction

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17
Q

What determines pre-load?

A

-Venous pressure

18
Q

Define after-load

A

-The force necessary to expel blood into the arteries at the very beginning of systole

19
Q

How does end diastolic volume effect contraction?

A

-The greater the end diastolic volume -> the greater the stretch of the ventricular myocytes-> the harder the contraction ie the extent of the filling determines the force of contraction

20
Q

What two factors determine arterial pressue?

A
  • CO

- TPR

21
Q

What is starlings law?

A

-A rise in VP will cause a rise in SV

22
Q

Draw starling’s curve and explain it

A
  • Venous pressure on X axis, Stroke volume on Y axis
  • As venous pressure increases so does stroke volume up to a point
  • At some point stretch is resisted by the pericardium and increasing filling over this point compromises contraction and SV decreases
23
Q

Define contractility

A

-Contractility is the extent to which SV increases in relation to venous pressure (ie the slope of starlings curve)

24
Q

What point of starlings curve is reached under physiological conditions?

A

-The plateau and declining gradient is not reached, always stays on the slope

25
Q

What determines the force of contraction?

A
  • End diastolic volume (starlings law)

- Contractility

26
Q

What happens to venous pressure and CO if venous return increases?

A

-VP increases -> end diastolic volume increases -> SV increases -> CO increases

27
Q

What effect does increasing VP have in SV?

A

-SV rises

28
Q

What effect does decreased AP have on SV?

A

-SV rises

29
Q

What happens to VP and CO if venous return decreases?

A

-Venous return decreases –> venous pressure falls -> end diastolic volume decreases -> SV falls -> CO falls

30
Q

What determines end systolic volume?

A
  • How hard the heart contracts

- How easy it is to eject blood (TPR)

31
Q

What effect does increased after-load have on SV?

A

-Increased TPR -> Increased arterial pressure -> increased after load -> decreased SV

32
Q

What effect does decreased afterload have on SV?

A

-Decreased TPR-> Decreased arterial pressure -> decreased afterload -> increased SV

33
Q

How is autonomic input to the heart controlled?

A

-Through baroreceptors

34
Q

What are baroreceptors?

A

-A sensory system which detects pressure in the arteries and veins

35
Q

What is the carotid sinus?

A

-A swelling in the base of the internal carotid artery which cantains numerous baroreceptors for detection of arterial pressure through stretch

36
Q

-What happens when the carotid sinus senses a change in arterial blood pressure?

A

-Sends signals to medulla oblongata of brain which controls the sympathetic activity of the heart

37
Q

Describe the effects of a fall in AP detected by baroreceptors on the HR

A

-Ultimate increase in HR to counteract low ap through decreasing parasympathetic activity and increasing sympathetic activity (if want a rise above 100)
(Vagus nerve parasympathetic activity is constantly active, lowering HR from 100 to resting -> decreasing this activity will increase the HR)

38
Q

What happens to contractility when there is a fall in AP?

A
  • Fall detected by baroreceptors
  • Increased contractility through increasing sympathetic activity
  • Increases CO to raise AP
39
Q

Why is there a limit to increasing HR to maintain AP?

A

-Increasing heart rate shortens diastole, if the HR is very high the heart will not fill adequately and the CO will fall

40
Q

Describe the effects of increasing VP on heart rate

A
  • Bainbridge reflex

- VP increased -> detected by receptors in RA -> increase in CO due to decreased parasympathetic activity