Session 5 Flashcards

1
Q

Define flow and velocity

A

Flow - the volume of fluid passing a given point per unit time
Velocity - the rate of movement of fluid particles along the tube

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2
Q

Describe laminar flow

A

There is a gradient of velocity from the middle to the edge of the vessel. The fluid moves in concentric layers.

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3
Q

Describe turbulent flow

A

Follows a high mean velocity, low viscosity and/or irregular vessel lumen. The velocity gradient breaks down, fluid tumbles over and flow resistance is greatly increased.
It can be heard upon auscultation as a bruit if cardiac valves become sclerotic or when atherosclerotic blockages obstruct an artery.

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4
Q

For a vessel with a constant pressure driving flow, what does the mean velocity depend on?

A

The viscosity of the fluid and radius of the tube

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5
Q

Define viscosity

A

The extent to which fluid layers resist sliding over each other. It determines the slope of the gradient of velocity in the vessel.

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6
Q

Describe the effects of changes in tube diameter on flow rate

A

At a constant viscosity (slope gradient), the wider the tube the faster the middle layers move. Hence mean velocity is proportional to cross sectional area.

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8
Q

Why are children’s airways more prone to compromised flow than adults?

A

A 2mm reduction in a child’s trachea, caused by an inserted tube, reduces flow more than a 2mm reduction in the diameter of an adults trachea.

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9
Q

What can cause hyperviscosity syndrome?

A

Abnormally high plasma protein levels or rbc/wbc count

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10
Q

Why can functional cardiac murmurs be heard in severe anaemia?

A

As a result of high blood velocities and/or reduced viscosity of the blood due to low rbc count

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11
Q

Give the equation for pressure difference

A

Pressure difference = flow x resistance

Resistance increases as viscosity and length increase and as r^4 decreases

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12
Q

Why do capillaries offer little collective resistance despite being narrow?

A

Due to their parallel arrangement their individual resistances do not add up

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13
Q

Describe the pattern of flow resistance and pressure over the systemic circulation

A

Over the whole resistance, flow is the same at all points.
Arteries are low resistance, so their pressure drop is small.
Arterioles are high resistance so their pressure drop is high.
There is a small pressure drop in capillaries, venules and veins.

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14
Q

Describe the relationship between arteriole resistance and arterial pressure

A

The higher the resistance of the arterioles at a constant flow, the higher the arterial pressure.
The higher the cardiac output at a constant arteriole resistance, the higher the arterial pressure.

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15
Q

How does distensibility of the blood vessels affect the relationship between flow and pressure?

A

As the vessel stretches, the diameter of the lumen increases so resistance falls and flow increases.
The higher the pressure in a vessel, the easier it is for blood to flow through it.

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16
Q

How does distensibility of blood vessels produce the property of capacitance?

A

As vessels widen, more blood transiently flows in than out and vice versa. This allows distensibility vessels to store blood (mostly veins).

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17
Q

What is Poiseuille’s law?

A

When blood flow is steady and laminar in blood vessels larger than arterioles, the blood flow is:
Proportional to the pressure difference
Proportional to the fourth power of the radius (both velocity and flow are proportional to area)
Inversely proportional to the length of the vessel
Inversely proportional to the viscosity of the blood

18
Q

What is the compliance of a vessel?

A

The ability to distend and increase volume due to pressure increase

19
Q

Define total peripheral resistance

A

The sum of the resistance of all the peripheral vasculature in the systemic circulation

20
Q

What is the advantage in having distensible vessel walls in terms of pressure waves?

A

Compliance acts to store mechanical energy during systole and dissipates energy more gradually over diastole. It dampens the pulsatile nature of the systolic pressure wave.

21
Q

What is the pulse pressure?

A

The difference between diastolic and systolic pressures. At rest ~40mmHg

22
Q

How is the average pressure calculated?

A

Diastolic pressure plus 1/3 pulse pressure

23
Q

What is the pulse wave?

A

Contraction of the ventricles generates a pulse wave, which propagates along the arteries faster than blood. This is felt as a pulse where arteries come close to the surface and are pushed against a reasonably hard surface.

24
Q

Describe flow autoregulation

A

Vasomotor tone can be decreased due to metabolic activity and release of local vasodilator metabolites (H+, K+, adenosine). Increased blood supply removes metabolic factors with a gradual return to vasomotor tone by SNS.

25
Q

What is reactive hyperaemia?

A

Occurs when circulation is cut off for ~minute, then restored. The local arterioles dilate maximally due to a build up of local metabolites.

26
Q

What is central venous pressure and what factors affect it?

A

The pressure in the great veins supplying the heart.

Depends on return of blood from the body, pumping of the heart, gravity and muscle pumping.

27
Q

Give the equation that relates flow to velocity

A

Flow = velocity x area