1- special circulations Flashcards
where do coronary arteries arise from?
base of aorta
what is oxygen demand of cardiac muscle like?
high, especially during exercise
what are special adaptations of coronary circulations?
- high capillary density
- high basal blood flow
- high oxygen extraction under resting conditions
how can extra oxygen (when required) be supplied to the heart?
can be supplied by increasing coronary blood flow
- there is high oxygen extraction (75% over 25% whole body average) under resting conditions
what is coronary blood flow controlled by?
- intrinsic mechanisms
- extrinsic mechanisms
how does intrinsic mechanisms control coronary blood flow?
- 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)
what is metabolic hyperaemia?
process by which the body adjusts blood flow to meet the metabolic needs of its different tissues in health and disease
how does extrinsic mechanisms control coronary blood flow?
- 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)
what is functional sympatholysis?
when sympathetic stimulation of the heart results in coronary vasodilation despite direct vasoconstriction effect
explain how sympathetic stimulation of heart affects coronary blood flow?
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
when does peak coronary artery flow occur?
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
what does shortening diastole effect on coronary flow?
very fast heart rate = shortening diastole = decreased coronary flow
when does most of coronary blood flow and myocardial perfusion occur?
occurs in diastole when the subendocardial vessels in left coronary artery are not compressed
what percentage of adult body mass if skeletal muscle?
40%
how does skeletal muscle blood flow increase during exercise?
- 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