Cardiac Cycle and Basic Haemodynamics Flashcards
What are the pressure and flow changes that occur with systole and diastole?
Diastole
- Ventricular pressure is less than atrial pressure
- Ventricular pressure is much less than pulmonary artery and aortic pressure
- Blood fills the ventricle passively down a small pressure gradient (but high flow because resistance is low). At rest 80-90% of ventricular
Atrial systole - ventricular diastole
- Ventricular pressure is less than atrial pressure.
- Ventricular pressure is much less than pulmonary artery and aortic pressure
- Active filling of ventricles (passive filling slow prior to atrial systole)
Ventricular systole - isovolumic contracion
- Ventricular pressure is greater than atrial pressure
- Ventricular pressure is rising but is still less than pulmonary artery and aortic pressure
- Ventricular volume doesn’t change (ie iso-volumic).
Ventricular systole - ejection
- Ventricular pressure is greater than atrial pressure
- Ventricular pressure is greater than pulmonary artery and aortic pressure
- Blood ejected into pulmonary artery and aorta from R and L ventricles.
Ventricular diastole - isovolumic relaxation
- Ventricular pressure is greater than atrial pressure
- Ventricular pressure has fallen below pulmonry artery and aortic pressure
- Ventricular volume doesn’t change (iso-volumic)
Diastole
- Ventricular pressure is less than atrial pressure
- Ventricular pressure is much less than pulmonary artery and aortic pressure
- Blood fills the ventricle passively down a small pressure gradient (but high flow because resistance is low)
Apply physiological principles of the cardiac cycle to explain the normal heart sounds.
There are up to four heart sounds: S1, S2, S3 and S4.
S1 and S2 are each comprised of two sounds, names after the valves that are responsible for them. The two sounds comprising S1 cannot normally be distinguished clinically.
- S1 is the sound of the mitral and tricuspid valves closing, and marks the start of systole.
- M1 = mitral valve closes
- T1 = tricuspid valve closes
- S2 is the sound of turbulence against the closing of the aortic and pulmonary valves. The aortic valve closure just before the pulmonary valve.
- A2 = aortic valve closes
- P2 = pulmonary valve closes
- S3 is apparent in youth, exercise and pregnancy. It is the rush of blood during rapid diastolic filling.
- S4 is a presystolic (or atrial) ‘gallop’. Caused by the atrium contracting forcefully to overcome an unusual afterload e.g. in LV hypertrophy.
Contrast and describe the different vessels of the circulation.
Elastic aa: large amounts of elastic fibres in the tunica media. Conducting vessels as they conduct blood from the heart to the major regions of the body.
Muscular aa: large amounts of smooth muscle in the tunica media. Also called distributing vessels as they distribute blood to organs.
Arterioles: regulate blood flow from arteries to capillaries. Resistance vessels.
Capillaries: thin, endothelium and BM membrane only vessels between terminal arteriole and post-capillary venule. Called exchange vessels.
Venules: return blood flow from capillaries to venous system. Some exchange in the smallest venules.
Veins: return blood flow to heart. Highly compliant - capacitance vessels.
Explain how pressure and resistance affect flow, with reference to Ohm’s law.
Ohm’s law states that flow is directly proportional to change in pressure and inversely proportional to resistance.
Flow = change in pressure / resistance
This principle can be applied to a single vessel, the circulation supplying a whole tissue and the entire systemic circulation of the body (it is the heart that provides the pressure gradient for flow).
If we use the example of the whole circulation , in this case flow is the entire output of the heart (we call this the cardiac output). Therefore:
Cardiac output = (MAP - RAP) / TPR
Explain how viscosity and vessel radius affect flow, with reference to Poiseuille’s law.
Poiseuille’s law states that resistance is
- inversely proportional to the 4th power of vessel radius
- directly proportional to vessel length
- directly proportional to blood viscosity
R = 8nl / πr4
Therefore, Poiseuille’s law demonstrates that radius is the biggest determinant of resistance and thus flow.
Mean arterial blood pressure
MAP = DBP + 1/3 PP
The PP is roughtly proportional to the stroke volume, but also partiall determined by peripheral resistance and compliance of the vessel.
During hypovolemic shock - the heart reduces pump volume, thus pulse pressure decreases.
The MAP is closer to diastolic because the heart spends more time in diastole.
Where does the biggest fall in pressure occur?
At the greatest source of resistance. As
Change in pressure = flow x resistance
The bigegr the resistance of a degment, the more the pressure drops across that degment.
The biggest pressure drop is across small arteries and arterioles (ie. the resistance vessels).
Compliance and distensibility
Veins are 20 times more compliant than arteries.
This means that veins act as capacitance vessels, with the majority (61%) of blood at any point is held in the systemic veins.