L10 . Physics blood pressure Flashcards
What is Mean systemic Arterial Pressure and how do you calculate it
The force exerted by the blood against any unit area of vessel wall usually in the great arteries.
MAP: Diastolic pressure + 1/3 (difference between systolic and diastolic pressure)
What is Pulse pressure
The difference between the systolic (max) and diastolic (min) pressure.
What are the determinants of MAP
MAP = Cardiac out put X Total peripheral resistance.
What are the determinants of pulse pressure
Systolic pressure: 1. Aortic compliance: 2. Stroke volume (ejection rate) Diastolic pressure; 1. AC and Diastolic run off : HR and TPR
What is aortic compliance and its effect on BP
Compliance reflects elasticity of the vessel. Given by change in Volume/ change in Pressure.
- High compliance= stretchy, store more elastic energy/volume with little change in pressure
- Low compliance= stiff, high pressure increase compared to volume increase, has to work harder to push out blood because can’t store it.
This also means that in diastole there isn’t a lot of blood left to push out, so the diastolic pressure is lower than normal.
What is Stroke volume and its effect on systolic pressure
- How much being pumped out: so: increasing the stroke volume delivered to the aorta increases the arterial pulse pressure
- SV affected by: preload, afterload, chronotropy and inotropy -> can increase with exercise.
What is diastolic run off and its effect on systolic pressure
The ability of the blood to flow forward
- This can be hindered by having a lot of TPR. This will make flow slow so pressure will remain high.
- Having high heart rate means that there is less time for the blood to run out during diastole so diastolic pressure can stay higher
- Basically if blood can leave early it will reduce the diastolic pressure
what factors alter CO
HR, inotropic state, neural, humoral
Renal fluid volume control
what factors alter TPR
sympathetic vasoconstriction, vasodilation
How does gravity affect blood pressure
The pressure measured is also dependent on gravity. This is hydrostatic pressure and has to be overcome. Therefore
Total pressure = hydrostatic pressure + vascular pressure generated by the heart.
What mechanisms are involved in regulating Blood pressure within seconds
Nervous mechanisms (baroreceptor feedback mechanisms, central nervous system ischemic mechanism, chemoreceptor mechanism) combine to powerfully cause
- constriction of the veins and transfer of blood into the heart,
- increased heart rate and contractility of the heart,
- constriction of most peripheral arterioles to impede flow out of the arteries
What mechanisms are involved in regulating Blood pressure within minutes
- The renin-angiotensin vasoconstrictor mechanism (changes in angiotensin II levels in response to changes in perfusion of the kidney),
- stress-relaxation of the vasculature
- shift of fluid through the capillary walls into the circulation to readjust the blood volume.
What mechanisms are involved in regulating Blood pressure long term: Hours/days
The kidneys play a vital role in returning the blood pressure all the way to normal by restoring the salt and water levels. The interaction with the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and kidney function is especially important to ensure blood pressure regulation is not salt intake dependent.