Lecture 13 3/11/14 Flashcards
Blood Flow
the amount of blood flowing through a vessel or organ per given unit time. We can decrease or increase blood flow.
Two factors affecting flow rates
Pressure and Resistance
Q = P/R
Flow Dynamics or Ohm’s Law.
Q stands for what?
Blood Flow
P stands for what? And what is the definition?
Pressure. Stress exerted on a vessel wall as blood flows through it.
Q & P are proportional or disproportional? How?
Proportional. If we increase pressure, we’ll increase flow, if we increase flow rate, we’ll increase pressure
R stands for what? And what is the definition?
Resistance. Disproportional to blood flow. Increase in resistance will decrease blood flow.
Rules Regarding Pressure
1) Pressure is directly proportional to the flow rate or to that blood flow.
2) Fluid flows from higher pressures to lower pressures. It has to.
3) Greater the difference in pressure, the faster the flow rate.
MAP
Mean Arterial Pressure or the average pressure
an average blood pressure per given unit of time within that vessel. The key is average.
Full cycle is one second long. Only 2/10 vessel walls is exposed to the high pressure or 20%.
Equation is Diastolic + (Systolic - diastolic/3) = MAP should be around the 90’s.
Pulse pressure is the (Systolic Pressure - Diastolic Pressure). Hypertension or borderline Hypertension is around the 100’s.
Aorta Pressure
100 mmHg - The highest
Right Atrium Pressure
0-1 mmHg - The lowest
Three Factors Affecting Resistance
1) Vessel Diameter
2) Fluid Viscosity
3) Turbulence
Vessel Diameter
if there is decrease in vessel diameter will increase resistance.
Fluid Viscosity
5x thicker than water.
Higher the viscosity, decrease in blood flow, with everything else being equal. We have to increase blood pressure to get blood through there.
Turbulence
disruption in laminar flow. Turbulence is created by bifurcation.
The narrowing, whether by on purpose through vasoconstriction, or not on purpose because we’ve got a plaque in that region. Also turbulence creates sound. Turbulence creates edis and swirls.