30-09-21 - Blood Vessels and Lymphatics Flashcards
What is a brief description of systemic circulation?
- Elastic arteries
- Muscular arteries
- Arterioles
- Capillaries
- Venules
- Medium veins
- Large veins
What are the 3 layers of blood vessels starting from inside to out?
- Tunica intima
- Tunica media
- Tunica externa
What does the tunica intima create?
What is it lined with? => specific name
What is the purpose of this lining?
What does this lining sit on top of?
What is present in the tunica intima of larger arteries?
- The tunica intima creates the lumen of blood vessel (the inside of a tubular structure)
- It is lined by simple squamous epithelial cells, which forms what is known as the endothelium
- These endothelial cells release substances that control vascular constriction and relaxation, enzymes that control blood clotting, immune function, and platelet adhesion.
- These endothelial cells sit on top of a basement membrane which separates them from underlying tissue
- In larger arteries, an internal elastic membrane can also be present at this boundary of the intima and media, which provides additional support to blood vessels that stretch more.
What are large differences between the structure of veins and arteries?
Why are they different?
- The lumen of veins is significantly larger than arteries
- This is because veins carry a greater volume of blood than arteries
- Arteries (particularly muscular arteries) contain significantly more smooth muscle and veins contain more collagen and elastic fibres.
- This is due to arteries (especially muscular arteries) handling blood at higher pressure than veins
What is the Tunica Media composed of?
What might it contain?
What does it contain?
What is it responsible for?
How does it compare between other layers of arteries?
How does it compare between arteries and veins?
- Composed of concentric layers of smooth muscle cells, which surround the lumen and are used for vasoconstriction and vasodilation
- Contains a varying number of elastic fibres and an internal elastic membrane may be present between the media and externa.
- The tunica medica contains sympathetic vasomotor nerve fibres, which are used for vasoconstriction (reducing lumen size) and vasodilation (increasing lumen size)
- The tunica media is the thickest layer in the arteries, and contains the most smooth muscle
- It is much thicker in arteries than veins.
What does the Tunica externa consist of? <=> fibroblasts
What does it contain?
How does is compare between other layers of veins?
- Tunica externa is a sheath of longitudinally (running length wise) oriented connective tissue composed primarily of type 1 collagen fibres and elastin.
- Contains nerve fibres and lymphatic vessels.
- Contains Vaso vasorum – the blood supply to blood vessels.
- Contains elastic fibres in larger veins
What are the Vaso vasorum?
examples of bv
What is their purpose?
Where do they branch?
- Network of small blood vessels which nourish the outer layers of the largest blood vessels (e.g aorta, brachiocephalic, carotid arteries)
- They branch extensively into the tunica externa and the outer areas of the tunica media
What are elastic arteries?
What do they contain and why?
How do they compare to other vessels?
How do they withstand pressure?
How do they allow for continuous blood flow? <-> systole and diastole
- Elastic arteries are large, thick-walled arteries that are the closets to the heart, where pressure is very high
- They contain a larger lumen, which decreases resistance.
- They contain more elastin than other vessels (in all tunica) but tunica media contains the most.
- The elastin they contain allows them to withstand a lot of pressure
- The elastic arteries expand during systole and recoil during diastole which enable continuous flow of blood.
Label these arteries on a head and neck arteriogram and whereeach artery supplies
- Subclavian artery – supplies the upper limbs
- Vertebral artery – supplies blood to the neck’s vertebrae, the upper spinal column, the space around the outside of the skull, and parts of the brain
- Common carotid – main blood supply to head and neck
- Internal carotid – Main blood supply to the brain.
How do muscular arteries compare to other vessels?
How do they compare to elastic arteries?
What do they do?
What 5 things do they use vasoconstriction/vasodilation for?
- Muscular arteries have the thickest tunica media layer of all vessels
- They contain more smooth muscle and less elastic tissue in the tunica media than elastic arteries.
- Muscular arteries are more active in vasoconstriction, and use it for:
- Decreasing blood pressure to regulate blood flow
- Controlling the distribution of blood to issues
- Decreasing blood pressure before blood reaches delicate capillary beds.
- Occlusion (closure/blocking) to a principal artery or region in the case of haemorrhage (loss of blood from damaged blood vessels)
- Muscular arteries can also dilate to carry blood to ischaemic areas (deficient of blood flow.
What is the name of the artery that feeds the upper limbs?
How does its name change as it moves through the limb?
- The subclavian artery feeds the upper limb
- In the clavicle areas, it is called the subclavian artery.
- In the armpit areas, it is called the axillary artery
- In the upper arm, it is called the Brachial artery
- In the forearm, it splits into the radial and ulnar arteries.
What are anastomoses?
Where can they be found?
How are they formed in the hand?
- Anastomoses are backup routes for blood flow in case one route is blocked or compromised.
- They can be found around all joints in case blood flow is restricted during certain movements and positions.
- In the hand, superficial and deep Palmar arches are formed by both the radial and ulnar arteries of the hand.
- This arterial anastomosis ensures blood flow to the hands and fingers in any position of the upper limb.
Name some of the main abdominal arteries on this diagram
How does the femoral artery, vein and nerve lie in relation to each other in the upper leg?
inside out
Name the low limb arteries above the knee in this diagram