Lecture 5 Flashcards

1
Q

which organs only under SNS control?

A

SNS control

> sweat glands (SCL)

> heart muscle (left ventricle)

> adrenal medulla

> blood vessels

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2
Q

what are the main differences between arteries and veins with regard to blood pressure?

A

arteries: thick walls, muscle walls

> have to deal with blood pressure

veins: valve, low blood pressure

> valves used to prevent blood from going in the wrong direction

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3
Q

where is blood pressure measured?

A

in the main arteries

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4
Q

what are 2 mechanisms that increase/control blood pressure?

A
  1. vasoconstriction

> under SNS control

  1. increase cardiac output

> under SNS control (contractility)

> under PNS control (vagal nerve)

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5
Q

what heart state reflects systolic/diastolic blood pressure?

A

systolic: moment of highest contraction of left ventricle
diastolic: last moment of relaxation of left ventricle, before start contraction

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6
Q

why does blood in the arteries pulsate?

A

the aorta is elastic and stores the pressure

> then releases

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7
Q

what does a higher RSA reflect?

A

higher respiratory sinus arrhytmia

> higher heart period variability

> higher activity of vagal brake

> higher PNS activity

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8
Q

what are the psychological advantages/disadvantages of laboratory stress management?

A

advantages:

> type, duration and intensity stressor can be standardized

disadvantage:

> stressors are not for real

> stressors are not complex enough

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9
Q

what are the physiological advantages/disadvantages of laboratory stress measurement?

A

advantages:

> standardisation of factors with physiological confounding effects (e.g. posture, physical activity, environment etc)

disadvantages:

> stressors are of low intensity

> stressors are of short duration, only measurement of fast heterostatic responses, no measurement of slow allostatic counterregulatory responses

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10
Q

what are the psychological advantages/disadvantages of ambulatory stress measurement?

A

psychological

advantages:

> incremental validity

> higher ecological validity

disadvantages:

> no control over stress exposures

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11
Q

what are the physiological advantages/disadvantages of ambulatory stress measurements?

A

physiological

advantages:

> physiological responses to prolonged stress exposures can be measured

> sleep can be measured

> higher predictive validity

disadvantages:

> higher risk of signal loss

> no control over confounders (but they can be assessed)

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12
Q

ambulatory recordings: what accounts for most changes in heart rate?

A

most changes in heart rate can be accounted for by changes in physical activity

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13
Q

what are 2 strategies to deal with posture/activity effects in ambulatory measurement?

A
  1. standardize - only compare similar states of physical activity

> e.g. sitting only, standing only, walking only etc

> but you will loose data

  1. mathematical correction for physical activity

> robust

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14
Q

what is EMA?

A

EMA: ecological momentary assessment

> record physical activity via self evaluation

> via smartphone/ipod etc

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