Cardiovascular System Flashcards

1
Q

Give the equations for Darcy’s and Poiseuille’s’ laws:

A

Darcy’s law: Q = ΔP/R

Poiseuille’s Law R= 8µL/πr^4

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2
Q

What is Fick’s law?

A

Fick’s Law : Q = Ac Px([X]cap - [X]if)

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3
Q

How do you calculate arterial blood pressure? How do you calculate CO?

A

ABP = CO x TPR

CO = SV x rate

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4
Q

What were Guyton’s experiments and what did they show?

A

Used an artificial pump plumbed into dog circulation to replace heart with more powerful pump.

  • Did not increase cardiac output (since stroke volume decreased in proportion)
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5
Q

What is the Frank-Starling law?

A

Cardiac muscle has highest power when stretched to optimal length.

Therefore total liberated energy from heart is proportional to diastolic volume.

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6
Q

How do arterioles control flow rate (Fick’s law)?

A

Surface area: number of capillaries recruited

Permeability: depends on organ and chemical release (e.g. histamine)

Concentration: in both capillaries and interstitial fluid – controls diffusion rate of molecules and water.

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7
Q

How do arterioles protect capillaries from high pressure? Why is high BP damaging?

A
  • Bayliss effect: proceeding arteriole constricts to reduce flow rate
  • LaPlace’s law: lower pressure reduces risk of damage (P= wall T/r)

HBP can cause positive feedback of damage:
- HBP causes damage
- Reduces vasodilatory capacity
- Therefore more damage occurs
- Can increase BP further.

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8
Q

Which mechanisms control the degree of vasoconstriction in an arteriole?

A

Myogenic control: contraction and relaxation:
- Ca2+ binds to calmodulin (CAM) activating MLCK
- Releases inhibition of actin-myosin binding
- Ca2+-CAM inhibits ryanodine receptors (reduces contraction)

Paracrine control:
- L-arg and O2 converted to NO
- MLCK phosphorylated
- Powerful vasodilatation

Metabolite control:
- Low O2 causes functional hyperaemia (increased blood flow)

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9
Q

Detail myogenic control of smooth muscle using Ca2+:

A

Contraction:
- Ca2+ binds to calmodulin (CAM) activating MLCK
- Myosin activated (phosphorylated)
- Ca2+-CAM binds caldesmon releasing inhibition of actin-myosin binding

Against contraction:
- Ca2+-CaM inhibits ryanodine receptors (less free Ca2+ released) (gives –ve feedback)

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10
Q

How does NO act as a vasodilator?

A
  1. L-arg + O2 converted to NO using NO synthase
  2. Increases [cGMP] =
  3. Removes Ca2+ from cell
  4. Decreases RyR activity and causes Ca2+ to be pumped out of cell
  5. PDEs decrease GTP levels
  6. MLCK phosphorylated, inhibiting contraction = powerful vasodilator
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11
Q

Describe the routes for systemic control of TPR:

A

Hormonal:
- Adrenaline causes vasodilatation - - By binding Gβ2 causing MLCK phosphorylation (=inactivation)

Nervous (neurotransmitters):
- ACh causes vasodilatation by binding muscarinic M3 receptors
- Upregulating NO synthesis

  • Noradrenaline causes vasoconstriction
  • Binds Gα1q receptors which increases intracellular Ca2+
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12
Q

Do veins or arteries limit CO? Why?

A

Veins responsible:
- Highly compliant and hold majority of blood volume
- Therefore effective at increasing MSFP
- Maximum heart pumping force is limited by negative pressure in veins (would cause collapse)

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13
Q

Do veins or arteries control TPR? Why?

A

Arterioles responsible:
- Not very compliant therefore directly changes force required from heart.
- Higher RAP increases stretch of heart (cardiac muscle produces more power)
- Vasodilatation (e.g. during exercise) increases diastolic flow rate of blood to veins so venous return increases.

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14
Q

Draw a graph of RAP (x axis) against VR and CO:

A

See notes:

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15
Q

How is high pressure detected and transmitted?

A
  • Baroreceptors in the carotid sinus (via CNIX) and the aortic arch (CNX) are stretch sensitive
  • Stretch increases frequency of pulses to the medulla (depolarises cell)
  • Increased frequency of impulses inhibits the vasomotor centre
  • Decreases HR and BP
  • Adrenaline acts on β2 receptors (high density in skeletal muscle) causing vasodilatation
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16
Q

How is low O2 detected?

A

Chemoreceptors in the carotid aortic bodies.

17
Q

How is low BP detected and corrected?

A
  • Cardiopulmonary baroreceptors in the vena cava decrease their firing frequency
  • Inhibition of vasomotor area reduced, increasing sympathetic tone and HR
  • Bulbospinal pathways from medulla activate endothelium causing vasoconstriction by excretion of noradrenaline (α1)
  • Cardiac accelerator nerves also activated in SA node and ventricles to increase HR and contractility (chronotropic and inotropic effect)

((Remember kidney role in long-term))

18
Q

What evidence is there for feed-forward mechanisms of cardiovascular control?

A
  • Co-ordinating conscious decisions (e.g. exercise will occur) with medullary activity can pre-empt a drop in BP.
  • Emotions also act to warn body of subsequent action (e.g. fear/anger raises BP)
  • Increase in BP detected when thinking about exercise (with no actual exercise). May be due to prophylactic adrenaline release.
  • In cats: sympathetic cholinergic nerves cause vasoconstriction.
  • Curare experiments: no exercise performed but HR still increases.
19
Q

How can heart failure and oedema occur?

A
  1. Atrial pressure too high since blood pooling
  2. Arterial pressure too low (blood not flowing round)
  3. Reduction in oxygen from reduced circulation
  4. Brain tries to compensate using venoconstriction to increase MSFP
  5. CO cannot increase since heart has reduced power
  6. Oedema results from increased blood pooling
20
Q

Detail how phase I of functional hyperaemia occurs (directly after contraction):

A
  • Increased extracellular [K+] due to APs hyperpolarises arteriolar smooth muscle
  • Due to enhanced Na+/K+ pump action; activation of inward rectifying KIR channels (conduct K+ currents inward but not as well outward for large currents) and increased permeability.
  • Closes VG Ca2+ channels, relaxing the muscle
21
Q

What evidence suggests phase I functional hyperaemia is [K+] dependent? (3 pieces of evidence)

A

Ouabain Experiments:
- Stops Na+/K+
- Therefore reduced hyperpolarisation

Barium Experiments:
- Blocks KIR channel specifically
- Reduced vasodilatation

Timings:
- Reaction is too fast to be caused by change in other possible molecules e.g. concentration of O2/CO2/adenosine/lactic acid

22
Q

What is the muscle pump?

A
  • Muscle expansion during contraction accelerates venous return
  • Increases MSFP
  • Due to valves; blood is pushed back to heart, enhancing pressure gradient in capillaries.
23
Q

Detail how phase II of functional hyperaemia occurs:

A

Maintains high blood flow throughout exercise:
- Activation of β2 receptors by adrenaline
- Increased O2 offloading (Bohr Effect) releases NO and ATP from RBCs which causes vasodilatation
- Adenosine levels increase

24
Q

How does adenosine cause vasodilation?

A
  • Activating A2A receptors (Gs)
  • Opens K+ channels
  • Hyperpolarises cell, reducing contraction
25
Q

How does systemic control of blood flow compensate for functional hyperaemia?

A

Increased CO
- Increasing venous return and MSFP (by sympathetic activation, venoconstriction and ‘muscle pump’)
- Increasing HR by inhibiting cardiac inhibitory centre (CNX)

Feedforward mechanisms:
- Shown by curare experiments (no exercise still increases HR)

26
Q

Which factors limit maximum performance?

A

In a healthy individual: circulation
- Shown as power in one leg is more than half that of a single leg

Other factors:
- Haemorrhage: decreases ABP so TPR is increased to compensate.
- Hypoxia: either inability to breath (e.g. diving) or reduced oxygen concentration (altitude)

27
Q

How is haemorrhage compensated for?

A

TPR increased to compensate:
- Reverse-stress relaxation (smooth muscle contracts when stretch reduced)
- Starling filtration-reabsorption forces draw more volume into the blood

28
Q

Contrast the different responses to hypoxia in diving and at altitude:

A

Diving = cannot breath
- CONSERVE O2
- Primary chemoreceptor response
- Sympathetic drive over functional hyperaemia
- Reduce cardiac work and divert blood to vital tissues

Altitude = reduced O2 intake per breath
- INCREASE CO
- Secondary chemoreceptor response
- Increase HR, breathing rate and depth and venoconstriction.

29
Q

Why might HBP occur?

A

Raised TPR:
- Atherosclerosis causes inflammation and reduces compliance of endothelium.
- Positive feedback since HBP causes atherosclerosis which causes HBP

Raised MSFP:
- Due to kidney disease, raised NaCl or angiotensin II levels

30
Q

What effects can atherosclerosis have on the heart?

A

Cardiac ischemia (reduced blood flow and angina
- Concentric hypertrophy: reduces ventricular volume, increased O2 demand and arrhythmias
- Very high pressure may cause ventricular dilation (stretching) and systolic dysfunction.

31
Q

How is HBP treated?

A
  • Lifestyle changes!
  • Diuretics (reduce circulating volume)
  • Hormone antagonists (ACE inhibitors)
  • Reduce TPR (Ca2+ channel blockers)
32
Q

How does cardiac failure occur?

A

CO is insufficient to maintain body’s target ABP

  • Cardiac failure increases RAP
  • Increases venous and capillary pressure (oedema)
33
Q

What is cardiac shock?

A

CO insufficient to supply metabolic substrates:
- Hypovolemic shock = loss of circulating volume
- Cardiogenic shock = cardiac pathology/failure
- Distributive shock = severe fall in vascular tone e.g allergic reaction or sepsis