blood pressure I Flashcards
what is pressure? what is MAP?
-P = flow x resistance
-MAP = CO x resistance
CO maintained so variation comes from resistance
CO =SV x HR
what is the dicrotic notch related to?
-the closure of the aortic valve and separation of Peripheral circ and heart
what does the diastolic run off refer to?
- the drop in pressure due to blood flowing down stream
- pressure in periphery
what does vasoconstricition do to MAP and Capillary pressure? vasodilation?
vasoconstriction- increases MAP and decreases capillary pressure
vasodilation- decreases MAP and increases capillary pressure
how do you calculate the MAP
1/3 (systolic bp - diastolic bp) +DBP
pulse pressure- what is it and what’s it related to? what can it be used for?
pulse pressure is a pressure wave that travels faster than blood and is generated by the BP
related to stroke volume output, cardiac compliance, systolic ejection
-it can be used to measure the compliance in the pt heart and vessels by measuring the velocity
what does a fast velocity in pulse pressure suggest?
-it means that there is some lack of compliance because a more compliant vessel absorbs the force of the pulse pressure
where is pulse wave amplification the greatest and why?
- it is greatest downstream (near abdominal ao where there’s the bifurcation) because of the reflection of the wave back up the Ao
what does it tell us if the augmented pressure (combo of forward and reflected waves) is higher?
-there is less aortic compliance and could be pathological
what are two ways that we can regulate blood flow- acutely and long-term
acute- vasoconstriction and dilation
long-term- change size of vessels and number
how do you myogenically maintain autoregulation
- stretch on vessel will elicit contraction
what is NO and what does it do
how are capillaries affected?
- nitric oxide- alters the contraction in SM and causes vasodilation
- capillaries ARE NOT affected b/c they don’t have SM
endothelin
-vasoconstrictor- acts on endothelin receptor of SM and acts to constrict SM
how are acute and long-term regulatory mechanisms of blood pressure different?
1) acute- seconds to days, changes RESISTANCE, ANS changes thru reflexes
2) long term- days to weeks, changes VOLUME, has renal mechanisms, neurohormonal mechs
what do sympathetics do to blood vessels, heart, kidneys, adrenals to regulate blood pressure?
blood vessels- vasoconstriction via alpha receptors
heart- increase contractility via beta rec
kidneys-decrease glomular filtration rate (vasoconst), renin release
adrenals-epi./norepi release