Control of Blood Flow in Differing Vascular Beds Flashcards
What is the effect on coronary flow resistance and CO increases?
As CO increases with an increase in activity level (exercise) the coronary flow resistance increases.
a-VO2 definition
Arteriovenous oxygen difference.
It presents the difference in oxygen content in the blood between the arteriole blood and the venous blood
The effects of a very large difference in a-VO2
The cells extracts almost maximum amount of O2 possible at rest. Therefore increased demand for O2 must be met by large increases in flow.
Where would a small a-VO2 difference be found in the body
Organs with a low metabolic need / low O2 need (e.g. skin, kidney)
Why is flow to coronary muscle intermittent?
The arteriole pressure (Pa) needs to be greater than the venous pressure (Pv) for the vessel to be open AND the Pinside pressure (pressure in the aorta) needs to be greater than Poutside (pressure in the ventricle) for the vessel to be open.
If the ventricular pressure is greater than the aortic pressure will the blood flow?
There will be no blood flow
What does Pout mean and what happens during systole to the vessels in the left side of the hear?
Pout = Pressure in the ventricle. During systole the vessels are compressed by the high pressure in the ventricle.
Where does most blood flow during diastole in the left side of the heart?
Most blood flows to the left myocardium during diastole (85%)
What does Pin mean?
Pin means aortic pressure. During diastole this determines flow.
Why is the right ventricular pressure much lower than the left?
The right side of the heart is only pushing against the pulmonary circulation, where as the left side of the heart is pushing against the systemic circulation.
How is the coronary flow controlled?
Coronary arteries exhibit myogenic autoregulation in pressure range 60-100 mmHg. There is some sympathetic control present but is overridden by local control.
Metabolic hyperaemia is the dominant form of regulation. As the cardiac muscles contract this produces lots of metabolites e.g. NO, K+, etc. The higher the metabolic rate the more metabolites.
What is angina?
Narrowing of the coronary artery, when the O2 demand goes up (exercise) it is harder to supply enough oxygen to the heart muscle. This causes anaerobic respiration and the build up of lactic acid causing pain known as angina.
Cerebral circulation ensures what?
- Maintains totally secure O2 supply to the brain tissue (myogenic autoregulation) if this stops = death.
- After local flow according to activity functional hyperaemia (metabolic regulation)
Structural adaptations to cerebral circulation ensure blood reaches all parts of the brain. What adaptations at there?
- Short arterioles, dense capillary network
- Relatively high vascular resistance
- Cerebral perfusion maintained if a carotid artery obstructed, because of the circle of Willis. If an artery to the brain is blocked, because of the circle of Willis, cerebral perfusion is maintained.
Endothelial cells in the blood brain barrier are continuous not fenestrated. What do tight junctions allow?
Tight junctions allow for regulation of what can diffuse/move across the blood brain barrier. This is very important. There is no bulk flow or vesicular transport across the blood barrier just tight junctions formed by the cerebral capillaries.