6 Control of cardiac output Flashcards
Constant cardiac output: total peripheral resistance increases. What happens to arterial pressure & venous pressure?
Arterial pressure: increase, same volume through higher resistance - higher pressure to maintain volume
Venous pressure: decrease, blood entering at slower rate, less input @ any time
Constant total peripheral resistance, cardiac output increase. What will happen to the arterial pressure & venous pressure?
arterial pressure increase: same resistance, greater volume, pressure increase to pump all blood around body
venous pressure decrease: more blood from veins (input), volume increase so pressure decrease (veins distend)
Constant total peripheral resistance, cardiac output decrease. What happens to arterial pressure & venous pressure?
arterial pressure decrease: same resistance, less volume
venous pressure increase: ‘sucking’ pressure increase, reduced volume, same rate of flow
What is stroke volume?
end diastolic volume - end systolic volume
What is end diastolic volume?
volume of blood in ventricles at the end of diastole (end of resting phase)
What is end systolic volume?
volume of blood @ end of contraction (how much blood left behind)
What factors determine how much ventricles fill during diastole?
walls stretch enough to produce intra-ventricular pressure to meet venous pressure (outflow arteries)
(high venous pressure, more ventricles fill)
What is ‘pre-load’ on the ventricular myocardium?
end diastolic stretch on myocardium (determined by venous pressure)
the stretch before contraction (load into outflow arteries)
What is ‘after-load’ on the ventricular myocardium?
the FORCE necessary to expel blood into the arteries (determines what happens in systole)
How does changes in end-diastolic volume affect the force of the contraction of the following systole? What is this called?
the greater the end-diastolic volume, the greater the force of contraction (in the next systole) until a point reached
(the greater the heart stretches, the greater the contraction)
called Starling’s law of the heart
(harder contraction, greater stroke volume - more heart fills)
What is contractility?
the greater the ventricles are stretched, the harder the contraction, therefore the greater the stroke volume
What happens to the Starling’s law curve as contractility increases?
as contractility increases, the Starling’s curve becomes steeper & shifts to the left
At a constant cardiac output, what happens to the arterial pressure & venous pressure when the total peripheral resistance decreases?
arterial pressure decrease: low resistance initially, same volume
venous pressure increase: rate of blood entering venous increases, increasing pressure
At a given pre-load, how does changes in after-load affect stroke volume and peak systolic pressure?
As the after-load increases (force expel blood into arteries), the stoke volume (output per beat) and peak systolic pressure increases
How does arterial receptors detect changes in arterial pressure?
- baroreceptors
- stretch receptors: walls of aorta
- carotid sinus