Lecture - CVS (Rajesh Physiol 9 Special Circulation) Flashcards
1
Q
Coronary circualtion
- What’s the coronary blood flow like in a resting human and during heavy exercise?
- What’re the 5 names of arteries on the heart that you need to know?
- 95% of the coronary venous blood returns to the ____ ____. Where does the rest drain into?
- Where do the thebesian veins drain? What does this mean for the oxygenation?
- What’re the two special tasks the coronary circulation needs to do?
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2
Q
Special structural features
- What are the capillaries like in skeletal vs cardiac muscle?
- What does this high capillary density confer? (2 things)
- What’s the O2 extraction of the myocardium? But doesn’t it already have a high flow?
- Go understand the graph on slide 12 and explain the graph to a wall (yes, a wall because no one else wants to listen to you 😂)
- So how do deal with exercise?
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- Yeah but it still needs to extract 65-75% of the oxygen to meet its demands as well as the high flow
- Through increasing BF by metabolic hyperaemia
3
Q
Metabolic hyperaemia
- This is the most dominant form of ____ _____ in myocardium
- So you increase coronary blood flow in proportional to what? (As in skeletal muscle)
- What’s the flow chart for this active hyperaemia?
- So in metabolic hyperemia, the blood flow is linked to demand for oxygen. What does the grpah with coronary blood flow vs oxygen consumption look like?
- What’re two major vasoilators of coronary resistance vessels and when are they produced and how do they work?
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4
Q
Ischemic vasodilation (reactive hyperemia) limit damage by coronary artery disease
- In angina pateints, what does hypoxic vasodilation occur as a result of?
- In addition to dilating the vessels, what does this reactive hyperemia/ischemic vasodilation/hypoxic vasodilation help during a heart attack?
- So what is the difference between metabolic hyperemia (active hyperemia) and hypoxic/ischaemic vasoilation (reactive hyperemia) - slide 16
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5
Q
What’s your explanation for why coronary stenosis usually causes angina only during exercise/stress?
Include these terms in the explanation:
- Ohm’s law
- normal coronary artery resistance
- metabolic vasodilation
- stenosis, arterial resistance
- arteriogenesis
- reactive hyperemia
- exercise
- O2 demand
- angina
Have a look at the graph on slide 19
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6
Q
Special problems of coronary circulation
- There are functional end-arteries
- what does this mean? (there are two types of end arteries…)
- when atheroma (what is this?) develops, what happens? (2 things) - _____ obstructs coronary blood flow
- when it says 2/3rd of coronary arterial system is intramural - what does that mean?
- so systole compresses the vessels during what phase of the cardiac cycle?
- 80% of myocardial blood flow occurs during when?
- Beta blockers in heart failure or after MI increase what and hence get what?
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- So the vessels are in the walls so systole will compress them
7
Q
Assessment of coronary flow
What are the two?
- What is coronary angiography (arteriography) and what does it show the location of?
- What does isotope imaging of ventricle wall (gamma scan) show?
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8
Q
Special tasks of skin/cutaneous circulation
-What are the two special tasks and what are the mechanisms by which this is done?
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9
Q
Special structures of cutaneous circulation
- What is the purpose of arterio-venous anastomoses in extremities
- Is cutaneous blood flow affected by one of or both of outside and core temperature?
- What happens to the skin vessels when you increase ambient temperature……what about when there is a drop in ambient temperature?
- What is the paradoxical cold vasodilation? Why does it happen? What two reasons is it due to?
- So there is increased skin blood flow in response to increased core temperature (like exercise and fever), but what 2 things is this vasodilation and sweating cuased by?
- What is the disease called where you have excessive vasoconstrictor response to cold - how does it manifest?
- What can prolonged obstruction of flow by external compression cause? What’re some examples?
- What does postural fainting have to do with hot weather?
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10
Q
Cerebral circulation
- What’re the 2 special tasks
- Grey matter has a high rate of oxidative metabolism - what does this mean?
- When do you lose consciousness after cerebral ischaemia? When would it result in excessive damage?
- What is the circle of Willis and what is its purpose? Name the arteries involved
- How does the brain acheive a high O2 delivery to neurons?
- Does the grey matter have a high basal flow or a low basal flow?
- Go read the graphs on slide 46
- Why is the brain a selfish organ?
- What maintains perfusion during hypotension?
- Is cerebral blood flow constrant throughout life?
- What’re some problems with cerebral circulation?
- Go read summary table xx
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