Pressure and Flow in arteries and veins Flashcards
How are a sphygmomanometer and a stethoscope used to measure arterial pressure?
Cuff is inflated - constricts brachial artery
First audible tapping noise through stethoscope is because the peak of the systolic blood pressure is greater than the pressure of the cuff - a small blip of turbulent blood flow passes the stethoscope.
Noise becomes muffled as the cuff pressure is reduced because the flow becomes more laminar
The sounds disappear completely since the blood flow through the artery has returned to normal. The last audible sound is defined as the diastolic pressure
What are the advantages/disadvantages of this method of measurement of blood pressure?
Disadvantages - Accuracy
Discontinuous – olny use it for instantaneous measurements
Needs care – constant surveillance, not automated
Advantages - Cheap and non-invasive
What is the effect of high diastolic pressure on the aorta?
There is a higher total peripheral resistance so the aorta finds it harder to release blood
What is the effect of elastic vessels on pressure variations?
Dampens them down
What is the pressure wave affected by?
- stroke volume
- velocity of ejection
- elasticity of arteries
- total peripheral resistance (If TPR increases, stroke volume will go down (more energy is “wasted” building up sufficient pressure to open the aortic valve))
Define pulse pressure
Pulse pressure is the difference between the systolic and diastolic pressurereadings
What feature of arteries allows maintainance of high pressure during high systolic pressure?
Elastic fibres
How does pressure change from arteries - arterioles - capillaries - venules?
Decreases
What is name given to the blood pressure left to bring the blood back to the heart?
Systemic filling pressure
What is normal arterial pressure?
“Normal” arterial pressure
= 120/80 mmHg
Arterial pressure (especially pulse pressure) increases with age
Why is flow constant throughout the systemic circulation?
Because everything is in series
What is the pressure drop through the arteries?
•arteries (from ~ 95 to 90 mmHg)
–low resistance conduit
What is the drop in blood pressure throught the arterioles?
•Large drop through arterioles (from ~ 90 to 40 mmHg)
– the resistance vessels
Why is it good that blood pressure is low when blood reaches the capillaries?
–good, because they are thin-walled
What is the small pressure difference pushing blood back through the veins?
•(from ~ 20 to 5 mmHg)
–the systemic filling pressure