Blood Vessels Flashcards
What are the great vessels?
Vena cava (superior and inferior)
Pulmonary arteries / pulmonary trunk
Pulmonary veins
Ascending aorta / arch of aorta
Briefly describe superior and inferior vena cava
Superior vena cava is formed by the union of the right and left brachiocephalic veins
Inferior vena cava is formed by the union of the right and left common iliac veins (at level of L5)
Both drain into the right atrium
Briefly describe the pulmonary trunk
continuation of the right ventricle via pulmonary valve, carrying deoxygenated blood to the lungs
divides into left and right pulmonary veins at level of sternal angle
Briefly describe the ascending aorta
arises from aortic orifice of left atrium via aortic valve
first branches are left and right coronary arteries (from left and right aortic sinuses superior to aortic valve) which supply the heart
ascends 5cm to the level of the sternal angle where it becomes the arch of the aorta
briefly describe the arch of the aorta
continuation of the ascending aorta at the level of the sternal angle
continues inferiorly as the thoracic and then abdominal laorta
gives off:
- brachiocephalic trunk
- left subclavian artery
- left common carotid artery
What are the 6 types of blood vessels?
Arteries:
- elastic
- muscular / distributing
- arteriole / resistance
Veins:
- veins
- venules
- capillaries
What are the three layers of blood vessel walls and what are they made up of?
Tunica intima
- internal
- endothelium (epithelial cells)
Tunica media
- middle
- smooth mm & elastic fibres
Tunica externa / adventitia
- external
- connective tissue & collagen
What are the functions of the three layers of the blood vessel walls?
Tunica intima
- in direct contact with bloodstream
- nutrient & waste exchange in capillaries
Tunica media
- smooth mm contracts in vasoconstriction & to move blood through vessels (especially arteries)
- elastin provides stretch & recoil
Tunica externa
- collagen gives ability to stretch
- contains vaso vasorum & vaso navorum
Which vessels only have one wall layer?
Capillaries - tunica intima only
In which vessels are specific layers of the wall thicker and in which are they thinner?
Tunica intima
- similar in all
Tunica media
- thickest in arteries
- thinner in veins
Tunica externa
- thickest in muscular arteries and large veins
What are the functions of each of the 3 types of arteries?
Elastic
- largest arteries near the heart
- elastin in walls allows large degree of stretch and recoil
- dampen pulsatile pressure by absorbing systolic pressure from heart
Muscular
- distribute blood flow to body tissues
Arteriole
- distribute blood into or bypass capillary beds
- active in vasoconstriction & BP regulation
- pre-capillary arterioles vasodilates in inflammatory response to allow more blood flow to injured tissue
What are the functions of each of the 3 types of veins?
Capillaries
- arranged in interweaving networks called capillary beds
- exchange of materials between blood and interstitial fluid
Venules
- post capillary venules enhance inflammatory response via vascular permeability
Veins
- can accomodate a large blood volume (65% of total BV)
- convey blood back to heart via venous pumps
What are the 4 mechanisms that aid venous return?
Valves
- avoid backflow of blood
Muscular pump
- contraction and relaxation of skeletal mm around veins pumps blood towards heart
Respiratory pump (w/ inspiration)
- decreased thoracic pressure ‘vacuums’ blood towarads heart
- increased intrabdominal pressure ‘pushes’ blood towards heart
SNS stimulation
- vasoconstriction can aid venous return
What are the 7 major arteries supplying the heart?
Right Coronary:
- originates from arch of aorta above right coronary sinus
- travels down right coronary sulcus towards crux of heart
- supplies right atrium & right ventricle
Branches: right marginal & posterior descending
Right marginal:
- branch of right coronary at acute right margin of heart, and courses along acute margin of right ventricle towards the apex of the heart
- supplies right atrium and right ventricle
Right posterior descending:
- also called right interventricular
- branch of right coronary
- runs in posterior interventricular sulcus towards apex of heart (where it meets left anterior descending artery)
Left Coronary Artery:
- arises from arch of aorta above left coronary sinus
- divides into left anterior descending and left circumflex arteries
Left Anterior Descending:
- arises from left coronary
- descends in anterior interventricular groove
- connects with right posterior descending artery at apex of heart
Left Circumflex:
- arises from left coronary
- curves to the left and around to the posterior surface of the heart in the atrioventricular sulcus
- supplies most of the left atrium and posterior wall of left ventricle
- gives rise to left marginal artery
Left Marginal:
- branch / es off the left circumflex artery
Which coronary arteries arise from the right and which from the left coronary artery?
Right Coronary:
- right marginal
- right posterior descending (right interventricular)
Left Coronary:
- left anterior descending
- left circumflex
- left marginal