H2: The Circulation Flashcards

1
Q

Difference between blue and red circulation?

Affect on pressure and volume?

A

Red: Systemic Arterial circulation
•High pressure, low volume

Blue: Venus circulation - lead to pulmonary circulation
•Low pressure, high volume (~60%)

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2
Q

What are the 2 vessel types?

A

Capacitance vessels - the veins (holding ~60% of the BV)

Resistance vessels - Arterioles + capillaries (mainly responsible for blood pressure regulation and regulation of flow thru organs) ~7%

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3
Q

What are capillaries?

A
Perfusion beds (made up of much small blood vessels) in individual tissues. 
These are fed by Arterioles

Exchange O2 + CO2 + nutrients

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4
Q

Systemic vs Pulmonary

A

Systemic: occurs between the heart and the entire body

Pulmonary: occurs between the heart and the lungs

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5
Q

Diameter and wall thickness of different parts of circulation system

A
Aorta: diameter = 25mm
            wall thickness = 2mm
Artery: diameter = 4mm
            wall thickness = 1mm
Arteriole: diameter = 30 μm
                wall thickness = 6 μm

Terminal Arteriole: diameter = 10 μm
wall thickness = 2 μm
Capillaries: diameter = 8 μm
wall thickness = 0.5 μm

Venule: diameter = 20 μm
              wall thickness = 1 μm
Vein: diameter = 5mm
           wall thickness =0.5mm
Vena Cava: diameter = 30mm
                     wall thickness = 1.5 μm
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6
Q

Darcy’s Law - relation bw flow + pressure

A

F = ΔP / R
(increased R = decreased F)

MABP = CO * TPR

TPR is controlled by diameter of the small vessels. It has the biggest affect on BP

MABP = DBP + (SBP - DBP)/3

MABP is not 1/2 way bw systolic & diastolic BP, rather it’s 1/3 of the difference

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7
Q

Relationship between flow velocity and resistance in the vascular tree

A

Flow velocity is highest at Arteries, and gets smaller

Most of Vascular resistance is in the Arterioles (flow regulation occurs)

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8
Q

Laminar vs Tubular flow

A

Laminar: smooth surfaced-tube, fluid dynamic gives a phenomena called laminar flow
>flow velocity fastest in the centre
>flow on outside will be slower bc of friction

Turbulent: narrowing in the vessel beyond a certain point/ if flow velocity exceeds parameters under which laminar flow can occur
(BAD)

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9
Q

Reynold’s number equation.

How is Turbulent flow prevented?

A

Re = plv/n

Laminar flow when Re

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10
Q

How is stenosis usually formed in the vasuclar tree

A

Usually atherosclerotic plaques build up at bifurcation sites, due to the turbulent flow.

Changes at these sites partly to do with reflection of waves of the vessel wall.

Eg: plqs in coronary arteries = Heart attack
plqs in corotid arteries = stroke
plqs in peripheral = peripheral vascular disease

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11
Q

Laplace’s law?

A

P = T/r

Important bc a small diameter vessel requires much less tension to contain a given pressure

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12
Q

Pressure v Time graph

A

Diastolic pressure equivalent to the minimum pressure in Aorta during diastole (75mmHg).
This increases during ejection phase

Peaks ~120mmHg (systolic pressure)

The little blip (dicrotic notch) shows closure of aortic valve

Mean pressure is 1/3 of max pressure

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13
Q

Rigid v Elastic tube

A

If Aorts was rigid, change in pressure would be very steep. This can cause damage (during systole + diastole)

Elastic tube decreases height of pressure Δ. An elastic (compliant) Aorta helps smooth out the variation in arterial BP and store energy (WindKessel function)

> Elastic recoiling in diastole helps maintain BF in forward direction, so helps to maintain BP + flow to tissues during relaxation phase

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