Physiology of blood vessels Flashcards

1
Q

Hemodynamics

A

A collection of mechanisms that influence the dynamic (active and changing) circulation of blood

  • circulation of different volumes of blood per min is essential for healthy survival
  • circulation control mechanisms must accomplish two functions:
    1. Maintain circulation
    2. Vary the volume and distribution of the blood circulation
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2
Q

Primary principle of circulation

A
  • blood flows because a pressure gradient exists between different parts of its volume; this is based on Newton’s first and second laws of motion
  • P1-P2 is the symbol used to represent a pressure gradient; P1 represents the higher pressure and P2 the lower pressure
  • a perfusion pressure (PP) gradient is needed to maintain blood flow through a local tissue
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3
Q

Arterial blood pressure

A
  • the primary determinant of arterial blood pressure is the volume of blood in the arteries
  • a direct relationship exists between arterial blood pressure and arterial blood volume
  • cardiac output (CO) is the volume of blood pumped out of the heart per unit of time (mL/min or L/min)
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4
Q

Pic

A

Pic

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5
Q

Cardiac output

A

CO (vol/min) = SV (vol/beat) x HR (beats/min)

- the cardiac reserve is the amount the CO can increase above the resting CO

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6
Q

Pic

A

Pic

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7
Q

Factors that affect SV

A
  • starling’s law of the heart
  • within limits, the longer or more stretched, the heart fibers are at the beginning of contraction, the stronger the contraction
  • the amount of blood in the heart at the end of diastole determines the amount of stretch or preload placed on the heart fibers
  • unlike mechanical pumps, the myocardium contracts with enough strength to match its pumping load (within certain limits) with each …
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8
Q

Pic

A

Pic

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9
Q

Contractility

A

Strength of contraction
- also influenced by chemical factors: (1) neural: norepinephrine (2) endocrine: epinephrine (3) triggered by stress, exercise

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10
Q

Ejection fraction

A

EF is the ratio of SV to end-diastolic volume (EDV)
- usually expressed as a percentage:
EF = (SV / EDV) x 100
- in a healthy adult, the EF is at least 55% …

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11
Q

Afterload

A

The pumping work the heart must do to push blood into the arteries

  • the harder it is to push blood out of the ventricles, the lower the stoke volume
  • abnormally high afterload form flow resistance in the arteries can cause heart failure
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12
Q

Cardiac pressoreflexes

A
  • aortic baroreceptors and carotid baroreceptors are located in the aorta and carotid sinus
  • they affect the autonomic cardiac control center in the medullla, and therefore parasympathetic and sympathetic outflow, to aid in control of blood pressure
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13
Q

Pic

A

Pic

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14
Q

Carotid sinus reflex

A
  • located at the beginning of the internal carotid artery
  • sensory fibers from carotid sinus baroreceptors run through the carotid sinus nerve and the glossopharyngeal nerve to the cardiac control center
  • parasympathetic impulses leave the cardiac control center and travel through the vagus nerve to reach the SA node
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15
Q

Aortic reflex

A
  • sensory fibers extend from baroreceptors in the wall of the aortic arch through the aortic nerve and through the vagus nerve to terminate in the cardiac control center
  • stimulation causes the cardiac control center to increase vagar inhibition, this slowing the heart
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16
Q

Other reflexes Ethan influence HR

A
  • emotions produce changes in HR through the influence of impulses from the cerebrum by way of the hypothalamus
  • anxiety, fear, and anger often increase HR
  • exercise normally increases HR
  • increased blood temperature or stimulation of skin heat receptors increases HR
  • decreased blood temp or stimulation of ….
17
Q

Peripheral resistance

A
  • resistance to blood flow imposed by the force of friction between blood and the walls of its vessels
  • factors that influence peripheral resistance:
    1. Blood viscosity: the thickness of blood as a fluid
    2. Diameter of arterioles
18
Q

Pic

A

Pic