Haemodynamics and microcirculation Flashcards

1
Q

What is the calculation for MAP?

A

CO x TPR
Cardiac output x total peripheral resistance
CO = HR x SV
MAP = HR x SV x TPR

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2
Q

What does Darcy’s law state?

A

Flow in steady state is linearly proportional to the pressure difference between two points, concerns fluid flow (volume/time)

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3
Q

What is mean velocity?

A

Flow divided by total cross sectional area, as total cross sectional area increases as the blood enters the microcirculation, mean velocity falls progressively

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4
Q

Is total flow altered?

A

No remains equal to cardiac output at each level of the vascular system

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5
Q

Where does laminar flow happen?

A

Arteries and veins

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6
Q

Where does turbulent flow happen?

A

Ventricles and in ascending aorta of healthy subjects

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7
Q

Where does single file flow occur?

A

In capillaries

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8
Q

What did Jean Poiseuille find about resistance to flow?

A

Resistance to steady flow along a straight cylindrical tube is proportional to tube length and fluid viscosity and inversely proportional to tube radius raised to the 4th power

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9
Q

Why are arterioles the main site of resistance in the circulation?

A

Flow is extremely sensitive to vessel radius, resistance increases with a decrease in radius

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10
Q

What venules collectively are arranged in series?

A

Arteries, arterioles, capillaries, venules and veins

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11
Q

Does total resistance increase or decrease if series units are added?

A

Increase

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12
Q

Does total resistance increase or decrease if parallel units are added?

A

Decrease

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13
Q

What is distending pressure?

A

Pressure acting on a vessel inside minus the pressure outside

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14
Q

What is the compliance of a vessel defined as

A

The change in volume per unit change in distending pressure

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15
Q

Do veins have a higher compliance than arteries?

A

Yes, they are thin walled and easily stretched

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16
Q

Veins act as volume reservoirs while arteries act as … reservoirs/

A

Pressure

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17
Q

What is the law of LaPlace?

A

Magnitude of force or tension (T) necessary to withstand the transmural pressure (Pt) is influenced both by the vessel radius (r) and wall thickness (u)
T = Pt x r / u

18
Q

In large arteries is Pt large or small

A

Large so wall needs to be thick to compensate

19
Q

In veins is there tension generated?

A

Yes Pt is low, r is still large though

20
Q

Why are capillaries walls very thin?

A

Pt and r very small

21
Q

Where is the likelihood of vessel rupture the greatest?

22
Q

What is the definition of microcirculation?

A

Circulation of blood through the smallest blood vessels - arterioles, capillaries and venules

23
Q

Where is the density of capillaries the highest?

A

Metabolically active tissues - skeletal muscle

24
Q

What does blood flow in capillaries depend on?

A

Not uniform - depends on contractile state of the arteriolar smooth muscle

25
what is auto regulation?
Intrinsic adjustment of blood flow to a tissue or vascular bed so the flow meets the requirements at a give time
26
How are changes in blood flow occurring?
Change in diameter of arterioles and altering the contraction of precapillary sphincters
27
What are intrinsic control mechanisms classed as?
Myogenic or metabolic
28
What is the relationship between metabolism and blood flow?
As rate of metabolism increases so does blood flow as long as perfusion pressure is constant and maintained in the absence of autonomic nerve input
29
When the metabolic rate of a tissue increases such that local oxygen consumption exceeds delivery, what happens?
Vasodilation and relaxation of an arteriolar smooth muscle, less resistance, more oxygen in capillary beds causes metabolic rate to decrease and less oxygen consumption
30
What products of metabolism cause relaxation of smooth muscle?
CO2, H+, K+ and adenosine
31
Which products mediate vasodilation?
Prostacyclin and nitric oxide
32
What is the endothelium derived relaxing factor that causes relaxation of vascular smooth muscle?
Nitric oxide
33
In myogenic control what is flow?
Pressure gradient / resistance
34
If myogenic flow is to remain constant what has to happen?
Increased pressure gradient met by an increase resistance in flow
35
How does the myogenic response occur?
Perfusion pressure increases, stretch of muscle, constriction increases, increased resistance, decreased flow/increased flow according to pressure
36
What is long term autoregulation?
If nutritional/oxygen demands chronically exceed delivery this occurs. Due to both an increase in microcirculatory vessels supplying blood to tissue and provoked by partial occlusion of a coronary vessel
37
How do lipophilic solutes enter or leave the capillary bed?
Via transcellular route
38
How do hydrophilic solutes cross capillaries?
Intercellular clefts (albumin and other plasma proteins cannot)
39
Where is hydrostatic pressure the greatest?
Arterial end
40
How do hydrostatic pressures result?
Capillary blood pressure
41
How do osmotic pressure gradients result in the capillary bed?
Presence of large, non diffusible plasma proteins, net osmotic pressure favours fluid absorption