1- special circulations Flashcards

1
Q

where do coronary arteries arise from?

A

base of aorta

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2
Q

what is oxygen demand of cardiac muscle like?

A

high, especially during exercise

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3
Q

what are special adaptations of coronary circulations?

A
  • high capillary density
  • high basal blood flow
  • high oxygen extraction under resting conditions
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4
Q

how can extra oxygen (when required) be supplied to the heart?

A

can be supplied by increasing coronary blood flow
- there is high oxygen extraction (75% over 25% whole body average) under resting conditions

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5
Q

what is coronary blood flow controlled by?

A
  • intrinsic mechanisms
  • extrinsic mechanisms
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6
Q

how does intrinsic mechanisms control coronary blood flow?

A
  • decreased pO2 (partial pressure oxygen) causes vasodilation of coronary arteries (as an attempt for more O2 to get to tissues)
  • metabolic hyperaemia matches flow to demand
  • adenosine (from ATP) is a potent vasodilator (heart work harder breaks down ATP to make adenosine eventually)
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7
Q

what is metabolic hyperaemia?

A

process by which the body adjusts blood flow to meet the metabolic needs of its different tissues in health and disease

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8
Q

how does extrinsic mechanisms control coronary blood flow?

A
  • coronary arteries supplied by sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerves BUT:
    • vasoconstriction over-ridden by metabolic hyperaemia as a result of increased heart rate & stroke volume
    • so sympathetic stimulation of the heart results in coronary vasodilation despite direct vasoconstriction affect (called functional sympatholysis)
    • circulating adrenaline activates beta 2 adrenergic receptors which cause vasodilation (beta 2 receptors in blood vessels)
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9
Q

what is functional sympatholysis?

A

when sympathetic stimulation of the heart results in coronary vasodilation despite direct vasoconstriction effect

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10
Q

explain how sympathetic stimulation of heart affects coronary blood flow?

A

so sympathetic stimulation itself →decreased coronary blood flow

sympathetic stimulation also →increased circulating adrenaline → increased coronary blood flow

sympathetic stimulation also→increased SV & HR →increased CO which leads increased coronary blood flow
the increased SV & HR →increased cardiac work →increased metabolsim → decreased pO2 →increased adenosine →increased coronary blood flow

increased metabolism →metabolites like K+, pCO2, H+ →increased coronary blood flow

= this means that overall even though sympathetic stimulation itself decreases coronary blood flow due to all the other factors it actually leads to increased coronary blood flow

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11
Q

when does peak coronary artery flow occur?

A

in diastole because:

during systole compression the coronary arteries are compressed as the muscular walls are squeezing & limiting blood flow, in diastole the heart is relaxed and the pressure within heart muscle is lower which creates a pressure gradient favoring flow into coronary arteries, perfusion pressure is optimal in diastole meaning more oxygen & nutrient delivery to myocardium

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12
Q

what does shortening diastole effect on coronary flow?

A

very fast heart rate = shortening diastole = decreased coronary flow

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13
Q

when does most of coronary blood flow and myocardial perfusion occur?

A

occurs in diastole when the subendocardial vessels in left coronary artery are not compressed

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14
Q

what percentage of adult body mass if skeletal muscle?

A

40%

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15
Q

how does skeletal muscle blood flow increase during exercise?

A
  • during exercise, local metabolic hyperaemia overcomes sympathetic vasoconstrictor activity
  • circulating adrenaline causes vasodilation (beta 2 adrenergic receptors)
  • plus increased cardiac output during exercise these could increase skeletal muscle blood flow in many folds
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16
Q

does skeletal muscle vascular bed impact blood pressure?

A

yes - skeletal muscle vascular bed has a big impact
- during resting conditions, blood flow to skeletal muscles is low

17
Q

what is the skeletal muscle pump?

A
  • large veins in limbs lie between skeletal muscles
  • contraction of muscles aid in venous return
  • one way venous valves allow blood to move forwards towards the heart
18
Q

what does skeletal muscle pump help with?

A

help reduces the chance for postural hypotension & fainting

19
Q

what happens if skeletal muscle pump defective?

A

blood pools in lower limb veins if venous valves become incompetent (varicose veins)

20
Q

does varicose veins lead to reduction in cardiac output?

A

no - usually doesn’t lead to reduction of cardiac output because of chronic compensatory increase in blood volume

21
Q

in pulmonary circulation is resistance higher in pulmonary or systemic circulation?

A

systemic circulation resistance higher - pulmonary resistance is only 10% of that of systemic circulation

22
Q

is pulmonary artery blood pressure typically high, average or low?

A

low blood pressure - usually 20-25 over 6-12 mmHg

23
Q

what are special adaptations of pulmonary circulations?

A
  • pulmonary capillary pressure is low (8-11 mmHg) compared to systemic capillary pressure (17-25 mmHg) = this helps less blood move from pulmonary to systemic circulation
  • absorptive forces exceed filtration forces - protects against pulmonary oedema
  • hypoxia causes vasoconstriction of pulmonary arterioles. COMPLETE OPPOSITE EFFECT OF HYPOXIA ON SYSTEMIC ARTERIOLES (purpose = would help divert blood from poorly ventilated areas of lung)