Lecture 16 - Cardiovascular Regulation Flashcards

1
Q

Protein gradient?

A

from higher conc. in plasma, across capillary to essentially nil conc. in interstitial fluid

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2
Q

Water movement between cells and interstitial space?

A

water movement between cells and interstitial space is driven by osmotic gradients; cell volume is determined by Na and water balance in extracellular compartment

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3
Q

Osmoreceptors?

A

cells in supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei of hypo. sensing changes in effective osmolality by altering volume, modulating synth. and release of AH from PPG; increased plasma osmolality also stimulates thirst receptors in hypo

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4
Q

ECF volume affecting cardiac function?

A

increased ISF and plasma volume increase total ECF, increasing filling pressure of heart -> cardiac output -> arterial pressure (affect on peripheral R also)

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5
Q

Cardiac receptors?

A

myelinated and unmyelinated neurons sensitive to small changes in pressure

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6
Q

Loss of blood volume?

A

cardiac filing decreased, reduced cardiac receptor activity but maintained arterial baroreceptor firing until >10% BV loss reduces arterial pressure and arterial baroreceptor firing

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7
Q

Neuro-humoral response to reduction in ECF volume?

A

DRAW IT; ADH fast RAAS slow,

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8
Q

Restoration of blood constituents?

A

RCV and other constituents restores over day to weeks, preformed albumin transferred into circulation immediately after acute blood loss but other proteins produced by liver over 3-4days, red cell synthesis complete after 4-8wk

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9
Q

Acute blood loss?

A

nonhypotensive haemorrhage (<10%, MAP maintained, pulse pressure reduced), hypotensive haemorrhage (>10%, fall in systemic BP), haemorrhagic shock (extreme, not compensated for long time, replacement of volume but maybe no CV homeostasis restoration)

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10
Q

Response to altered pressure?

A

changes in hydrostatic pressure causes more blood to be stored in the lower extremities singificantly decreasing ventricular filling - NOT GRAVITY

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11
Q

Systemic arterial baroreceptor resetting?

A

maintaining higher level of firing causes rightward shift, therefore long term maintenance of average pressure is maintained by multiple systems e.g. cardiac receptors, RAAS, renal function

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