Reflex, hormonal and local blood flow regulation Flashcards

1
Q

how does blood flow

A

it flows form a high pressure are to a low pressure area

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2
Q

overall blood flow in adults

A

around 5000mL/min (cardiac output)

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3
Q

functions of circulatory system

A
deliver blood to organs
deliver oxygen and nutrients
removal of CO2
maintenance of ion concentrations
delivery of hormones around of body
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4
Q

what is the circulatory system consisted of

A

a pump - the heart, when it contracts it creates the pressure needed
collecting tubes - veins have low pressure and high volume
extensive system thin vessels - capillaries

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5
Q

how is the circulatory divided (3)

A

arterial system - from heart to tissues
venous system - from tissues to heart
microcirculation - exchange between tissues

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6
Q

hemodynamics

A

velocity, pressure, flow, resistance, dimensions of components of systemic circulation
all applied to blood flow
vessels are not rigid tubes
blood changes due to viscosity

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7
Q

arterial blood pressure

A

development and maintenance adequate to perfuse tissues is base requirement for survival

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8
Q

formula for mean arterial blood pressure

A

MABP = Cardiac Output (CO) x Total peripheral resistance (TPR)

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9
Q

formula for cardiac output

A

CO = Heart rate (HR) x Stroke Volume (SV)

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10
Q

formula for flow

A

Q = Velocity (V) x Cross sectional area (A)

measure of volume per unit of time

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11
Q

Darcy’s Law

A

Q = Pressure differential / Resistance (R)

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12
Q

Largest cross sectional area

A

in small capillaries (2500 cm2)
each have a small cross sectional area but there is a lot of them
they decrease the velocity of blood flow

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13
Q

how does the velocity of blood change in relationship with the cross sectional area

A

as area increases, the velocity decreases
this is due to the extensibility of arteries
resistance is greatest in small vessels
velocity lowest in capillaries to promote exchange

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14
Q

what is shear stress

A

as blood flows though a blood vessel, it exerts a force on the vessel wall parallel to the wall
is directly proportional to flow rate and viscosity

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15
Q

poiseuille’s law

A

governs the flow of fluid through cylindrical tubes
steady laminar flow
blood viscosity does not remain constant

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16
Q

poiseuille’s law formula

A

Q = [pi(Pi-Po)r^4]/8nl

Pi-Po - pressure gradient form the inlet (i) of the tube to the outlet (o)
r - radius of the tube
n - viscosity of the fluid
l length of tube

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17
Q

resistance to blood flow

A

it is directly proportional to the length of the vessel and viscosity of blood

R= Ln/r^4

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18
Q

Total peripheral resistance (TPR)

A

sum of all vascular resistance within systemic circulation

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19
Q

how are the arteries supplying blood to organs arranged

A

in parallel

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20
Q

what is the advantage of the organs not being downstream from another

A

changes in resistance in one organ directly affect blood flow in only that organ

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21
Q

what alters resistance

A

contraction of the smooth muscle in the vessel wall

local tissue factors

22
Q

what is functional/active hyperaemia

A

increase in organ blood flow associated with increased metabolic activity of an organ or tissue
when cells are active they use more oxygen and fuel

23
Q

the by-products of metabolism

A

vasodilators that increase the blood flow: CO2, H+, K+, lactate, adenosine

24
Q

how does blood flow change in relationship with O2

A

as O2 consumption increases so does the blood flow

25
Q

why does reactive hyperaemia occur

A

occurs due to tissue hypoxia and a build up of vasodilator metabolites to dilate arterioles and decrease vascular resistance
flow is elevated as a result

26
Q

when does reactive hyperaemia occur

A

after cessation of blood flow

e.g. after myocardial infarction or stroke

27
Q

what happens to the tissues in reactive hyperaemia

A

tissues become reoxygenated and vasodilator metabolites are washed out
the resistance vessels regain normal vascular tone, flow returns to control

28
Q

what happens to blood flow during reactive hyperaemia

A

blood flow goes beyond the nasal level (the original level), reaches a peak, and then returns to the basal level due to the washing out of vasodilator metabolites

29
Q

period of occlusion

A

induces greater metabolic stimulus for vasodilation

increases in peak and duration of reactive hyperaemia

30
Q

what controls the innvervation

A

the autonomic nervous system via the sympathetic and the parasympathetic tone

31
Q

effect of sympathetic and parasympathetic nervous systems in heart

A

sympathetic: accelerates heart
parasympathetic: inhibits heart
together: balance

32
Q

what fires nerve innervation

A

changes in body fluid volumes - changes in blood volume

33
Q

the sympathetic innervation consists in

A

vasoconstriction (alpha-adrenergic stimulation) of vascular smooth muscle
skeletal muscle vasodilation (beta-adrenergic and cholinergic simp. stimulation releasing Ach)

34
Q

why does the heart accelerates in symp. innveration

A

SA node is accelerated and increases the contractility due to the beta-adrenergic stimulation

35
Q

why does the Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP) increases

A

increased TPR and CO

36
Q

parasympathetic innervation functions

A

vasodilator of vascular smooth muscle (few organs)
slows heart rate
less involved in changing TPR

37
Q

the deceleration of the heart rate is due to

A

the deceleration of SA node and decreased atrial contractility due to action of muscarinic receptors

38
Q

what are muscarinic receptors

A

where Ach from the parasympathetic nervous systems reacts

39
Q

what can signal the innervation

A

baroreceptors and chemoreceptors

40
Q

what are baroreceptors

A

receptors that respond to vascular stretch

41
Q

location of baroreceptors

A

carotid sinus and aortic arch

42
Q

functions of baroreceptors

A

vasodilation

restoration of BP to lower level - increased BP leads to parasympathetic stimulation (vagal and glossopharyngeal nerves)

43
Q

what are chemoreceptors

A

receptors that respond to chemical signals, changes in pO2, pCO2, pH

44
Q

where are chemoreceptors located

A

carotid sinus and aortic arch

45
Q

where do chemoreceptors act

A

respiratory centres and vasomotor regions

46
Q

hormones involved in vasoconstriction

A

adrenalin, angiotensin II, vasopressin

47
Q

hormones involved in vasodilation

A

atrial natriuretic factor, kallikrein-kinin system

48
Q

action of vasocontriction hormones

A

increase cardiac output by increasing the heart rate and force heart contractions
cause vasoconstriction of arterioles and veins in the skin and abdominal organs

49
Q

action of vasodilation hormones

A

lowers blood pressure by causing vasodilation and by promoting the loss of salts and water in the urine, which reduces blood volume

50
Q

paracrine agents

A

Nitric oxide (NO) and Endothelin (ET-1)

51
Q

action of NO

A

endothelium derived relaxing factor

  • released from endothelium
  • vasodilator
  • anti-proliferative, anti-thrombotic
  • impairment of NO -> thrombus that can lead to stroke
52
Q

action of ET-1

A
  • released from endothelium
  • most potent vasoconstrictor
  • release stimulated by Ang II, hypoxia, sheer stress, catecholamines