Capillaries and Venules Flashcards
General characteristics of Capillaries
- Greatest Cross-sectional area
- Walls are one cell thick
- Small diffusion barrier
- Blood flows slowly through these vessels enhancing exchanges
What are the two types of capillaries?
- Continuous capillaries
- Fenestrated capillaries
Continuous capillaries
- Most numerous in the body
- Endothelial cells are bound together by tight junctions that prevent leakage
- Highly permeable to small water-soluble molecules that can pass through the narrow junctions called intercellular clefts between the endothelial cells
- Lipid soluble molecules that can pass through the membrane of cells are also permeable
- Low permeability to large macromolecules and proteins that are too large to pass through intercellular clefts and are not lipid-soluble
Fenestrated Capillaries
- Located where rapid diffusion across capillary walls needs to occur (Intestines, Endocrine glands, and Kidneys).
- Pores or fenestrations are in the endothelial cell walls can be large enough to allow proteins to pass
- Allows rapid diffusion of small water-soluble molecules
Discontinuous Capillaries or Sinusoids
- Found in the spleen, bone marrow, and liver areas where proteins and immune cells
- Large blood-filled space where gas exchange and exchange of substances between the capillaries and tissues.
- No basement membrane
- Large blood filled space lined by fenestrated endothelial cells
What two structures regulate blood flow into certain capillaries?
- Metarterioles
- Precapillary sphincters
What are metarterioles?
Intermediate of arterioles and capillaries as they possess some isolated smooth muscle rings at specific points instead of arterioles continuous layer
What are the function of metarterioles and precapillary sphincters?
Avoid capillary bed by clamping down on the precapillary sphincters and directing it through the metarteriole which connects the arteriole and venule
They act as a means of pathway bypassing the capillary bed by shunting and cut off the blood flow to a specific capillary bed by contracting the sphincter and directing the blood from the arteriole to the venule
How do the metarterioles act as a bypass mechanism?
When the precapillary sphincter is contracted that increases resistance of blood flow to the capillary bed shunting most of the blood to the metarterioles and negating to the capillary bed
When the precapillary sphincter is relaxed there is increased blood flow to the capillary bed as there is less resistance to flow.
What determines whether the smooth muscle is contracted or relaxed?
Local metabolic activity
⇑⇑CO2 will cause the sphincters to relax increasing blood flow to the capillary beds to allow gas exchange
⇓⇓⇓CO2 will cause sphincters to constrict to decreasing blood flow as increased gas exchange is not as crucial
What is the process of vasodilation and vasoconstriction called?
Vasomotion
What is hydrostatic pressure?
This is the pressure that the fluid within the capillaries push on the walls of the vessel forcing gases and fluids out into the surrounding tissue.
What are the two types of pressure that affect exchange across capillaries?
Hydrostatic pressure
Osmotic or Oncotic pressure
What is osmotic pressure?
This is the drawing force that proteins and salts within the capillaries have on the water within the interstitial fluid.
Water always moves from an area of high concentration to one of low concentration so if the [H2O] is lower in the capillaries than in the interstitial fluid water will flow into the vessel (reabsorption)
What creates hydrostatic pressure?
THE HEART