Lecture 13: Vascular function part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

How does vascular function differ in skeletal muscle circulation?

A
  • Strong metabolic autoregulation
  • Extensive SNS innervation, ‘shut down at rest’
  • During exercise SNS is ineffective compared to the vasodilators present.
  • B2 receptors also cause vasodilation anyways and increased Adrenaline from exercise will promote this.
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2
Q

What are the effects of metabolites on skeletal muscle vascular smooth muscle?

A
  • Relax vascular SM directly or via endothelium
  • Inhibit sympathetic adrenergic stimulation
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3
Q

How does skeletal muscle enhance venous return?

A
  • Metabolite accumulation has little direct effect on post cap vascular tone
  • Myogenic responses, increased SNS, circuitlating catecholamines and histamine promote venoconstriction == enhanced venous return
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4
Q

How is the cutaneous circulation characterised?

A

Characterised by:
- Low cap density
- Large number of superficial AV shunts = high SA = heat exchangers

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5
Q

What regulates the flow of blood to the cutaneous AV shunts for heat exchange:

A
  • Only alpha receptors are present
  • Powerfully influenced by SNS
  • Local factors cause the affinity of alpha receptors for NA to decrease when temperature rises.

i.e local warming causes vasodilation

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6
Q

How does sweating influence cutaneous blood flow?

A
  • Cholinergic innervation of sweat glands activates kinin system and bradykinin vasodilates pre cap vessels.

This together with exercise induced vasodilation facilitate heat exchange

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7
Q

How is cerebral circulation autoregulated?

A
  • Huge metabolism influences
  • Even if total brain is constant, theres big regional variations
    Local mechanisms for this include:
    -> pH, (most sensitive to pCO2), K, PaO2
    -> Little ANS effect
    -> Increased circulatory volume may reduce flow.
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8
Q

Whats happening in compartment syndrome and how does this relate to circulation?

A
  • Heamorrhage of oedema rises Intersitital pressure and this in turn can:
  • 20mmHg rise = post cap. collapse, this can be restored.
  • 40mmHg rise = pre-cap collapse, under perfusion, or no perfusion.

This depends on compartment compliance
- Superficial - skin = super compliant
- Deep - Less comliant

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9
Q

Whats happening in raynauds disease?

A
  • Vascular spasm because inappropriate responsiveness of alpha adrenergic receptors following exposure to the cold.
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10
Q

Whats happening in circulatory shock?

A

Sustained ischeamia can change microcirculation in a way that is not easily reversed i.e inadequate vascular tone

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11
Q

How can ischemia cause inadequate vascular tone?

A
  • Inadequate perfusion of blood vessels
  • depletion of of NE in nerve terminals
  • Perivascular accumulation of vasodilator metabolites and local release of histamine, bradykinin, serotonin or PG

= Can lead to microvascular thrombosis.

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