Control of Peripheral Circulation Flashcards
What are continuous capillaries?
No clefts or pores (brain)
Clefts only (muscle and most other capillaries)
What are fenestrated capillaries?
Clefts and pores (intestine, kidney) specialised for fluid exchange
What are discontinuous capillaries?
Clefts and massive pores (liver)
How does exchange take place in capillaries?
Mostly diffusion
-self regulating
-non-saturable
-non-polar substances across phospholipid membrane
- polar substances across clefts/pores
Carrier mediated transport
What is hydrostatic pressure?
Force pushing liquid out of vessel
What is osmotic (oncotic) pressure?
Force drawing liquid into vessel
What are some causes of oedema?
Raised central venous pressure (ventricular failure)
Lymphatic obstruction
Hypoproteinaemia
Increased capillary permeability (inflammation, rheumatism)
What is active metabolic hyperaemia?
Trigger is an increase in local metabolism
Paraffine signal released
Causes arteriolar dilatation
What are the local intrinsic controls?
- Active metabolic hyperaemia
- Pressure autoregulation
- Reactive hyperaemia
- The injury response
What are some central circulatory controls?
Sympathetic nerves
Releases noradrenaline binding to alpha1 receptors causing arteriolar constriction