7- Cardiac Output Regulation: Vascular Mechanisms Flashcards

1
Q

what determines cardiac output (CO)

A

-cardiac output is proportional to right atrial pressure (in steady state, venous return is equal to CO- amount of blood moved out in periphery or being absorbed)

  • heart and vasculature
  • if we know preload and “state” of heart then we know CO
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2
Q

Preload

A
  • end diastolic volume (related to right atrial pressure)

- determined by volume of blood in circulation and resistance and compliance of blood vessels

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3
Q

cardiac tamponade

A

filling of pericardium with fluid that can compress the heart and impact right atrial pressure

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4
Q

normal interpleural pressure

A

-4 mmHg w/ right atrial pressure starting around -2 mmHg

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5
Q

what happens when right atrial pressure increases?

A

amount of blood returning to heart decreases

-during respiratory inspiration the venous return increases because of a decrease in right atrial pressure

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6
Q

Right atrial pressure vs.

  • Cardiac Output
  • Venous return
A
  • right atrial pressure and cardiac output have a direct relationship
  • RAP and venous return have an indirect relationship
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7
Q

Key points of the venous return curve

A

1) Mean systemic pressure – depends on blood volume and vasculature compliance
2) Slope of the curve–depends on vascular resistance
3) Plateau–depends on the collapse of the thin walled veins in the chest

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8
Q

mean systemic filling pressure (Psf)

A

7 mmHg (right amount of blood for body in system)

-fullness of systemic circulation (depends on blood volume)

Psf = total volume / total compliance

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9
Q

Cardiac Output regulation (2 primary factors)

A
  1. pumping ability of heart
    - hypereffective: increased intrapleural pressure (increase in contractility)
    - hypoeffective: reduced intrapleural pressure (decrease in contractility)
  2. venous return
    - if you increase resistance it decreases venous return and if you decrease resistance you get more venous return
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10
Q

sympathetic stimulation and inhibition is on what side of systemic circulation

A

mainly on venous side of circulation

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11
Q

REVIEW THIS LECTURE IN TOTAL CAUSE OF ALL THE GRAPHS

A

REVIEW THIS LECTURE IN TOTAL CAUSE OF ALL THE GRAPHS

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12
Q

To think about cardiac output think about the aspects of the circulation that can have a big effect.

A

1) Cardiac contractility–changes the slope and “maximum permissive level” of the cardiac function curve
2) Arterial resistance-changes the slope of the Venous return curve– more resistance decreased negative slope (i.e. shifts counter clockwise)
3) Venous compliance–changes the intercept of the Venous return curve – more compliance = decreased pressure of the intercept
4) Blood volume–changes the intercept of the Venous return curve– more blood = increased pressure of the intercept

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13
Q

Arteriovenous fistula

A

A-V fistula or A-V shunt

-connection b/w arteriole and venous side of circulation (can happen in heart and peripheral system)

  • very low resistance pathway from the arteries to the veins
  • It can happen at any level in the periphery including in the large vessels or in the organs.
  • In order to understand what happens think about blood shifting from the arterial to the venous side as the resistance decreases
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14
Q

Fick principle for determining CO

A

O2 consumption / [O2 in pulmonary vein - O2 in pulmonary artery]

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15
Q

blood volume determined by?

A

difference between water and sodium intake (drinking) and excretion (urine formation)

  • has a direct impact on cardiac filling
  • cardiac filling is preload that helps determine CO
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16
Q

Atrial pressure =

A

cardiac output x total peripheral resistance

TPR is determined by nerves, heroines and local mechanisms

17
Q

what happens when venous return increases

A

end-diastolic volume (preload) increases and stretches or lengthens the ventricular muscle fibers

18
Q

frank-starling relationship

A

describes increases in stroke volume and cardiac output that occur in response to increase in venous return or end-diastolic volume

19
Q

increases in contractility cause

A

increase in cardiac output for any level of right atrial pressure or end-diastolic volume (preload)

20
Q

decreases in contractility cause

A

decrease in cardiac output for any level of right atrial pressure of end-diastolic volume (preload)

21
Q

length-tension relationship in ventricle

A

increases in end-diastolic volume (preload) cause an increase in ventricular fiber length, which produces an increase in developed tension.

22
Q

venous return and cardiac output

A

the greater then venous return the greater the cardiac output