Vascular capacity Flashcards

1
Q

What is the vascular capacity?

A

The volume of blood that can fit into blood vessels

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2
Q

What 2 things regulate vascular capacity?

A

Cardiac output and vascular diameter

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3
Q

What is cardiac output?

A

The volume of blood that the heart pumps per unit time. Determined by heart rate x stroke volume

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4
Q

What is the stroke volume?

A

The volume of blood that the heart pumps with each beat

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5
Q

What regulates stroke volume?

A
Venous return (preload, filling of right atrium)
Arterial pressure (afterload)
Contractility (rate and strength of contractions)
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6
Q

How is stroke volume controlled intrinsically?

A

Venous return (ΔEDV) and arterial pressure

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7
Q

How is stroke volume controlled extrinsically?

A

Contractility has regulated by the nervous system and endocrine system

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8
Q

What is the EDV (end diastolic volume)?

A

Maximum amount of blood in the ventricles

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9
Q

What happens to the stroke volume if blood volume is increased? What is the series of events that leads to that?

A

Increased blood volume means increased EDV, which increases stretching of the ventricles, which increases the strength of contraction and increases SV

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10
Q

Does the end diastolic volume stay constant?

A

Changes with the amount of blood returning to the heart

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11
Q

What is the Frank Starling Law of the Heart?

A

The heart pumps out all the blood that enters the ventricles

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12
Q

What happens to the ventricle muscles when the end diastolic volume increases?

A

The muscles get stretched and contract stronger in response, which increases the stroke volume

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13
Q

How does the sympathetic nervous system affect the stroke volume?

A

Causes it to increase, which causes more blood to be pumped around the body and circulate stress hormones

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14
Q

What is the mean arterial pressure?

A

The pressure gradient across the circulatory system

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15
Q

What is the total peripheral resistance?

A

The sum of the resistance of all blood vessels in the circulatory system

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16
Q

Between the cardiac output, mean arterial pressure, and total peripheral resistance, which one does stays constant?

A

Mean arterial pressure. Bulk flow of the entire system depends on the pressure gradient

17
Q

How is total peripheral resistance changed?

A

Vasoconstriction and vasodilation

18
Q

How does the body redirect blood flow away from certain organs?

A

Arteriolar-venular shunts

19
Q

Which blood vessels determine which organs get access to blood flow?

A

Arterioles

20
Q

How is a capillary bed closed off or opened?

A

Sphincters composed of rings of smooth muscle cells. They contract to close off a capillary bed like a valve

21
Q

Why would blood be shunted away from an area?

A

Low metabolic needs

22
Q

What happens in the capillary beds of organs with high metabolic needs?

A

Pre-capillary sphincters relax and the arterioles dilate, which decreases the resistance and increases the amount of blood received by that region

23
Q

What are baroreceptors?

A

Pressure sensors found in the arterial system that sense artery stretching due to increased cardiac output

24
Q

What do baroreceptors do when they sense an increase in artery pressure?

A

Send a signal to the medulla oblongata which causes a reflex reduction of the cardiac output and peripheral vascular resistance to maintain the MAP