Cardiac Output and Venous Return Flashcards

1
Q

normal cardiac output in a 70 Kg man

A

5-6 L/min

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2
Q

Flick Method

A

Based on conservation of mass. The amount of blood entering the pulmonary artery each minute plus the amount of oxygen entering from the alveoli must equal the amount leaving (oxygen entering= oxygen leaving)

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3
Q

CO Flick equation (basic concept)

A

CO = oxygen exhaled (out) / (Concentration of arterial o2) - (concentration of venous o2)

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4
Q

what assumptions are made when using indicator dilution

A

1.) Constant flow 2.) No loos of indicator 3.) no recirculation

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5
Q

how does the indicator dilution curve change with exercise

A

smaller- flow is faster and there is a higher cardiac output

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6
Q

Dilution idicator equation

A

CO = Bolus injected/area under the concentration curve OR CO= Bolus injected/Avg dye under curve x duration of curve

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7
Q

describe the “permissive role” of the heart

A

it normally pumps out (CO) all the blood it receives (VR)

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8
Q

Role played by systemic vasculatire in determining cardiac output

A

1.) Relative Filling of the vasculature (most critical) 2.) Total peripheral resistance

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9
Q

Cardiac output

A

amount of blood leaving the left ventricle each minute

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10
Q

Venous Return

A

the amount of blood entering the right atrium each minute

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11
Q

Factors that cause hypoeffective heart

A

Sympathetic decrease. MI, Myocardial damage, Impaired pump function (valcular, congenital, tamponade, pericarditis)

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12
Q

Factors that cause hypereffective heart

A

sympathetic increase (Vagal decrease), increased circulating catecholamines (positive ionotropic agents) , hypertrophy

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13
Q

Mean Circulatory Filling Pressure

A

pressure that would exist in all vessels of the systemic and pulmonary circulations if the heart were stopped and blood were allowed to re-equilibrate

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14
Q

What is the normal MSFP

A

7 mmHg

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15
Q

when the heart is stopped how does pressure change in the arteries and veins

A

venous pressure rises (normally low pressure due to compliance) and arterial pressure falls ( normally very high due to low compliance)

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16
Q

during circulation where does pressure equal the mean systemic filling pressure? What is the significance of this location?

A

small post capillary veins. This is wjere we thing of venous return starting

17
Q

Factors that increase MSFP

A

increased blood volumes, increased sympathetic tone (vasoconstriction- same blood volume in a smaller container) increased abdominal compression, increased skeletal muscle tone (exercise)

18
Q

Factors that decrease MSFP

A

Hemorrhage (low volume state), Spinal anesthesia (blocks sympathetic traffic to blood vessels)

19
Q

what happesn to the VR curve at -4

A

becomes flat- due to vena cava colalpse (-4 is intrathoracic pressure - below this the vena cava collapse)

20
Q

Describe the direction the venous return curve shifts when resistance changes

A

Increase resistance - counterclockwise shift from hinge point Decreased resistance - clockwise shift from hinge point

21
Q

factors that increase resistance in the venous system

A

increased sympathetic tine, polycythemia (increase viscosity) , circulating catecholamines

22
Q

factors that decrease resistance to venous return

A

decreased sympathetic tone, anemia (decreased viscosity) , AV fistula