5.2 Pressure & flow in the systemic circulation Flashcards

1
Q

What is ‘diastolic’ arterial pressure?

A

when blood doesn’t flow into arteries

elastic recoil - to maintain pressure (prevent pressure drop)

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2
Q

What is ‘pulse pressure’? when does it change?

A

Difference between systolic & diastolic pressure

decreases with increasing resistance & capacitance (e.g. arterioles –> capillaries)

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3
Q

How do you calculate mean arterial pressure from systolic, diastolic & pulse pressure?

A

mean arterial pressure = diastolic pressure + 1/3 pulse pressure

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4
Q

What is the approximate time is systole & diastole?

A

systolic: 0.3s
diastolic: 0.55s

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5
Q

what is ‘total peripheral resistance’?

A

total of all arteriole resistance on the body
inversely proportional to total body blood flow demand

(demand increase, TRP decreases)

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6
Q

How does elastic nature of arteries act to reduce arterial pressure fluctuation between systole & diastole?

A

in systole: elastin in aorta & elastic arteries stretch to smooth out pressure increase (not rapid increase)

diastole: elastic arteries release energy stored to smooth blood flow

‘Windkessel’ effect

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7
Q

What is ‘systolic’ arterial pressure?

A

pressure in arteries when blood flow into it

aorta + elastic arteries stretch to smooth out pressure wave

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8
Q

What is the role of arterioles?

A

resistance vessels along with pre-capillary sphincters
control volume of blood entering the capillaries
arterioles have a high resistance due to small lumen

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9
Q

What are pre-capillary sphincters?

A

a band of smooth muscles controlling flow into capillaries

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10
Q

Define vasoconstriction

A

constriction of (peripheral) arteries to increase blood pressure

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11
Q

define vasodilation

A

relaxation of arteries allow a greater volume of blood flowing through at any one time (rate), decreases blood pressure

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12
Q

What is vasomotor tone?

A

tonic contraction of smooth muscles (basic sustained contraction)

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13
Q

Which factors increase vasomotor tone?

A

autonomic SNS

through release of NA acting on alpha 1-GPCR - leading to Ca2+ contraction (IP3, SR, Ca2+, CaM, MLCK) - vasoconstriction

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14
Q

Which factors decrease vasomotor tone?

A
increase vasodilatation (trying to increase vasodilation)
metabolically active tissues produce vasodilator metabolites (e.g. H+, CO2, K+, Adenosine, Lactate)

decrease vasomotor tone causes vasodilation

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15
Q

What removes metabolic factors? Effects?

A

increased blood supply
gradually dominated by SNS
return to vasomotor tone

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16
Q

What does vasodilator metabolites achieve?

A

local control of blood flow

17
Q

What is reactive hyperaemia?

A

increase in blood flow after a brief period of ischaemia (e.g. arterial occlusion - maybe from blood pressure cuff)

18
Q

What is venous return?

A

blood flow back to right atrium from body

19
Q

What is central venous pressure?

A

blood volume determined by: cardiac output, body metabolic demand, back pressure (pressure opposing flow e.g. round bends)
depends on return of blood from body, pumping of heart, gravity & muscle pumping (out via heart - cardiac output)

20
Q

What is the range for central venous pressure and where is it measured?

A

-10 to +10mmHg

measured in the great veins

21
Q

What is autoregulation?

A

an example of homeostasis e.g. reactive hyperaemia - when blood flow becomes excessive after a brief ischaemia to try and adequately reperfuse the tissue before any damage from ischaemia

22
Q

What are the 3 broad factors affecting vasomotor tone?

A
  1. hormones (systemic)
  2. myogenic (local) e.g. acute contraction in violent coughing to present sudden increase in pressure
  3. endothelial factors (local) - from arterial endothelium