Chapter 15: VASCULAR DISTENSIBILITY AND FUBCTIONS OF THE ARTERIAL AND VENOUS SYSTEMS Flashcards

1
Q

How is vascular distensibility calculated ?

A

Vascular distensibility = increase in volume/ increase in pressure X original volume.

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2
Q

The veins are _____times distensible than the arteries of same caliber at a given increase in pressure.

A

8 times

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3
Q

Pulmonary arteries operate at low pressure than the systemic arteries, therefore, their distensibility is ___ times greater than the systemic arteries.

A

6 times

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4
Q

How to calculate the vascular compliance or capacitance of a vascular bed?

A

Vascular compliance= increase in volume/ increase in pressure.

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5
Q

What is the compliance and distensibility of a systematic vein as compared to an artery of similar caliber?

A

The compliance is 24 times more than the artery and has 8 times more distensibility and has 3 times greater volume than the artery.

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6
Q

The average blood volume of the adult arterial system?

A

700 mL

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7
Q

The mean arterial pressure of an adult?

A

100 mmHg

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8
Q

A ____ mL reduction in arterial volume will bring the arterial blood pressure to zero.

A

300 mL.

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9
Q

The mean venous blood volume of an adult?

A

2000-3500 mL and a drop in several 100 ML is required to cause 2 to 3 mmHg of venous pressure reduction.

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10
Q

What is one of the principal mechanisms of the body to increase cardiac output when needed?

A

Increasing systemic vascular tone to shift blood into the heart.

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11
Q

What is the significance of sympathetic control of vascular capacitance of the veins during hemorrhage?

A

It will ensure adequate cardiac output, volume, and pressure in the arteries even if there is 25% arterial blood volume lose.

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12
Q

Delayed complaince or stress relaxation of blood vessels?

A

When the vascular volume increase as in blood transfusion. The venous pressure also increases. However, within min, even if the volume is not changed the pressure within the vein decreases as a function of the stretching of venous vascular smooth muscles.

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13
Q

What is called pulse pressure?

A

It is the pressure difference between the SBP and DBP which is normally 40 mmHg.

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14
Q

What are the factors that affect pulse pressure?

A

1) Stroke volume out put of the heart.
2) vascular compliance or distensibility of the arterial tree.
3) The character of systolic ejection from the heart.

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15
Q

Pulse pressure is approximately equal to?

A

The ratio of cardiac output and arterial compliance.

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16
Q

What are the conditions that cause abnormal pressure pulse contours ?

A

Aortic stenosis- the diameter of the aortic valve opening is reduced. Consequently, the aortic pressure pulse is decreased. Which on aortic pressure contours of the volume pressure curve manifested as low amplitude peaks and obliterated incisura.
Patent ductus arteriosus- 50% of the systolic ejection falls through the ductus into the pulmonary circulation, leading to significant drop in diastolic pressure on the volume pressure curve it is manifested as high amplitude pressure contours.
Aortic regurgitation- on contours of the volume pressure curve it is classically presented as the absence of incisura as in aortic regurgitation there is no closing of aortic valve occurs. In addition the contours will look sinusoids due to fall of diastolic blood pressure to zero between heat beats

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17
Q

The velocity of pressure pulse transmission in the normal aorta?

A

3 to 5 m/sec.

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18
Q

The velocity of pressure pulse transmission in the large arterial branches?

A

7 to 10 m/ sec

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19
Q

The velocity of pressure pulse transmission in the small arteries?

A

15 to 35 m/sec

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20
Q

The cause of slow transmission of pressure pulse in the aorta as compared to the small vessels?

A

It is because the Greater the compliance of the vessel the lesser the transmission velocity of pulse pressure.

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21
Q

What may cause observable capillary pulsation?

A

The pathological observable capillary pulsation are seen or felt only when the aortic pulsation are extremely large or the arterioles are greatly dilated

22
Q

What are the causes of damping of the pressure pulse?

A

1) Resistance to blood movement in the vessel: A small amount of blood flow should occur to distend the next segment of the vessel in muscular arteries with high resistance this process becomes increasingly difficult.
2) compliance of the vessel: the greater the compliance of the vessel, the greater the quantity of blood required to increase the pressure within the vessel

23
Q

How does ageing affect the blood pressure mechanism?

A

Ageing will cause the blood pressure to increase due to arterial stiffening and atherosclerosis

24
Q

At normal heart rate a greater fraction of the cardiac cycle is spend in ____than _____?

A

Diastolic than systolic

25
Q

What is the relative contributions of diastolic and systolic pressure to mean arterial pressure?

A

60% diastolic pressure and 40% systolic pressure

26
Q

What is central venous pressure?

A

It is the pressure within the right atrium as it is to the right atrium the blood from all parts of the body flows.

27
Q

Regulation of central venous pressure or the right Atrial pressure?

A

It is regulated by a balance between the ability of right heart to pump blood into the lungs and the tendency of blood to flow from the peripheral veins to right atrium.

28
Q

What are the factors that can increase right Atrial pressure?

A

1) weakness of the heart.
2) hypervolemia
3) increase in peripheral venous pressure due to increase in large vessel tone.
4) arterioler dilation induced rapid blood flow to the venous system

29
Q

Normal right Atrial pressure?

A

0 mmHg

30
Q

The pathological maxim rage of increase in right atrial pressure?

A

20 to 30 mmHg

31
Q

The lower limit of right Atrial pressure?

A

-3 to -5 mmHg< atmospheric pressure which is the pressure in the chest cavity that surrounds the heart

32
Q

Why is peripheral venous pressure not noticably elevated in early stages of heart failure?

A

The heart function has to be significantly impaired to incur a 4 to 6 mmHg of increase in right Atrial pressure which is necessary to cause pooling of blood in the veins

33
Q

Normal intra-abdominal pressure?

A

6 mmHg

34
Q

What are the factors that can significantly increase intra-abdominal pressure ( 15 to 30 mmHg)?

A

Pregnancy, large tumors, abdominal obesity and ascites.

35
Q

What is hydrostatic pressure or gravitational pressure?

A

It is the pressure exerted by the weight of the blood on the vasculature. The venous pressure is maximum at the feet ( 90 mmHg), minimum at the brain( -10 mmHg)

36
Q

What is the risk of Opening the sagittal sinus during surgery?

A

The venous pressure within the sagittal sinus is only -10 mmHg. Therefore, opening the venous sinus can cause the air to be sucked into it and cause air embolism of the heart or lung leading to death.

37
Q

The mean arterial pressure is calculated at what level of the Arterial system?

A

It is calculated at the level of the heart. At the level of the feet it can be as high as 190 mmHg. The mean arterial pressure is a product of the gravitational factor too.

38
Q

What is the role of muscle pump or venous pump in venous pressure regulation?

A

The one way valves of the veins in conjunction with the contraction of the skeletal muscles pumps venous blood towards the heart. Therefore, during normal walking the venous blood pressure is down regulated from 90 mmHg to 20 mmHg

39
Q

What is the time required for the venous pressure at the feet to return to 90 mmHg when a person stands still?

A

30 seconds.

40
Q

A 15 to 30 min of standing still can cause 10 to 20% of reduction in Arterial blood volume. Why?

A

Increase in the hydrostatic pressure within the capillaries will increase Jv leading to the phenomenon of falling soldier who is in attention position for a long time

41
Q

What will be the atrial pressure when neck veins start to protrude and or become pulsatile?

A

It is when the right atrial pressure becomes 10 mmHg the lower neck veins protrude and when it reach close to 15 mmHg the all the veins will bulge

42
Q

What is the reference level of pressure measurement in the body and it’s approximate location?

A

It is a point in the circulatory system to which all pressure measurements are referred to be it arterial or venous. The anatomical location is at the level of tricuspid valve

43
Q

What is the mechanism behind keeping the tricuspid valve as the reference point for vascular pressure measurement?

A

The heart spontaneously prevents gravitational pressure changes at the level of the tricuspid valve by increasing the right ventricular systolic volume, if the pressure at the level of the tricuspid valve increases, thereby regulating the pressure closer to 0 mmHg. Conversely, if the pressure at the level of the tricuspid valve decreases the right ventricular diastolic volume will be reduced there by regulating the BP closer to 0 mmHg.

44
Q

What are the specific blood reservoirs ?

A

1) the spleen which can release as much as 100 ml of blood into the circulation by decreasing it’s size.
2) the liver: hepatic sinusoids can release several 100 MLs of blood when required.
3) the large abdominal veins which can release 300 mL when required.
4) Venus plexus beneath the skin: which can release several 100 mL
5) the heart and lungs: 100 and 100 to 200 ML

45
Q

What are the blood storage areas of the spleen?

A

The venous sinuses and the pulp

46
Q

The splenic capillary filtration physiology at the pulp ?

A

The steverman’s reflection co-efficient of the splenic capillary are very low. Therefore, the RBC’s ooze out into the trabecular mesh of the pulp, where they are stored. The plasma fluid then filtered from the trabeculum to the venous blood.

47
Q

Role of spleen in modulating hematocrit concentration?

A

When the splenic and splenic vascular constriction occurs due to sympathetic stimulation. The spleen release approximately 50 ml of concentrated red blood cells into the systemic circulation, raising the hematocrit concentration by 1 to 2%.

48
Q

What is the function of the splenic white pulp?

A

Its function is to produce lymphoid cells just like the ones manufactured by the lymph nodes.

49
Q

Blood cleaning function of the spleen?

A

The splenic pulp thoroughly sequences the blood before it goes to the sinuses. The old and fragile RBC’S are destroyed and the hemoglobin and the stroma of the RBC’S are digested by the reticuloendothelial cells of the spleen.

50
Q

What is the function of the reticuloendothelial cells of the spleen and liver?

A

They are integral parts of the blood cleansing and phagocytic system. When there is blood infection, these reticuloendothelial cells actively remove bacteria, parasites, debris. In many chronic infections splenomegaly occurs, just like lymphadenopathy as it works more intensily to remove the pathogens.