Regulation of Vascular Function Flashcards

1
Q

What happens when you vasocontrsitc pre-capillary vessels?

A
  • will increase pre-capillary resistance, and get a decrease pressure so will have a decrease flow of blood through capillary
  • this will mean that we get a decrease in hydrostatic pressure, and will lead to an increase in absorption of fluid from tissues
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2
Q

What happens when you vasodilate pre-capillary vessels?

A
  • will decrease pre-capillary resistance and increase pressure and blood flow across capillary
  • this will cause an increase of hydrostatic pressure and lead to extrusion of fluid into tissues
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3
Q

Veins and constriction

A
  • If we constrict veins, then get reduced capacity for them to store blood so an increase in driving pressure back to heart
  • and opposite in dilation
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4
Q

auto regulation

A

tendency of an organ to maintain constant blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure

  • cerebral circualtion tightly regulated
  • Myogenic control
  • metabolic control
  • endotehtlail control
  • flow idnuced vasodilation
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5
Q

Myogenic control

A

increase in transmural pressure results in vascular contrraction and vice cersea

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6
Q

metabolic control

A
  • if an organ is workign harder, demands increase need more flow
  • this causes vasodilation to try and increase flow
  • get metbolights formed hwen there is increased metabolism
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7
Q

Sympathetic activation

A
  • Adreanline, noradrenaline bind to B2 or a2
  • cause an increase in cyclic AMP, protein kinase A - and phosphorylates proteins - leads to increase calcium, and vasoconstrciton
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8
Q

Nerves

A

Pre synaptic
Get an AP, calcium enters cells
-get vesicles fuse w memrbane
-noradrenaline and adreanline released and cotransmitters
a2 receptors - noradreanline binds and inhibits release of further noradrenaline by closing calcium channels
inhibition - acetylcholine, adenosine, dopamine
exciation - angiotnsine 2, adrenaline

Vascular smooth muscle/post synaptic
-noradreanline binds to adrenoreceptors on VSM
-a1 - phosphorylates proteins and causes an increase in intracellualr calcium - vasoconstriction
-a2 receptors - get adenylate cyclase, get decrease in calcium concentrations, and get increase potassium out of cells - hyperpolarises = vasodilation
b2 - same affects as a2

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9
Q

Why do receptors vary in differnet organs?

A
  • receptors vary in different organs, so that we can control the blood flow to certain areas
  • e.g reduce blood to gut on SNS and get more going to muscles
  • a1 and a2 receptors - can change amount on different cells in differnt organs to get diferent responses
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10
Q

PNS activation

A

Cholinergic nerves - ach binds to muscarinic receptors

-causes relaese of NO and vasodilation

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11
Q

What happens when given an injection of noradrenaline vs adrenaline

A

Noradrenaline - causes vasoconstriction on most areas apart from coronary and cerebral circulation (decrease skeletal muscle, skin, kidney, splanchnic)

Adrenaline - similar affects but in resistance vessels and in skeletal muscle ( increased skeletal muscle flow, splanchnic flow) decrease skin flow, kidney flow

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12
Q

affinity for receptors

A
  • alpha - adrenaline, noradrenaline, isoprenaline

- beta 2 - isoprenaline, adrenaline, noradrenaline

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13
Q

Skeletal muscle circulation

A

Rest - vasoconstriction to blood vessels to stop blood flow there - effected by SNS
Exercise - vasodilation to decrease resistance and increase blood flow
however this activity is ineffective at high exercise rates and is more controlled by vasodilator metabolights

(similar to cardiac muscle)

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14
Q

Skin circulation

A

affinity for receptors decreases with temp
sympathetic cholenergic activation of sweat glands activates kinase cascade which

-tries to allow heat loss

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15
Q

Cerebral circulation

A
  • tighlty autoregulated betwewen 60-180 mmHg
  • local control mecahnismss - pH, pCO2, pO2
  • decrease paCO2 - will lead to increas eblood flow and vice versa
  • when pao2 drops below 50, then get blood flow increasing
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