Tutorial 3 Cardiovascular disease Flashcards

1
Q

Explain the meaning of haemodynamics:

A
  • Can be defined as the physical forces that determine the blood flow
  • Can be influenced by the heart arte, radius of the blood vessel and the viscosity and volume of the blood
  • Can be monitored by the examining BP and HR overtime
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2
Q

Explain how BP is regulated:

A
  • BP is dependent on two factors:
    a. amount of blood being pumped by the heart
    b. resistance to flow (the peripheral resistance)
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3
Q

Explain the relationship between arterial blood volume and BP:

A
  • Increased stroke volume or HR leads to increased CO, which prompt arterial blood flow and result in increased arterial BP
  • Increased blood viscosity or decrease vessel diameter leads to increased peripheral resistance, as a result, impeding the blood velocity while triggering the compensation mechanism of increased VO (induce high BP)
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4
Q

Define hypertension and outline how it it managed

A
  • Systolic BP>140; Diastolic BP>90
  • Treatment includes:
    a. lifestyle change
    b. drug therapy
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5
Q

Describe the role of SNS in the pathogenesis of hypertension:

A
  • increased SNS activity leads to hypertension in 3 MAIN WAYs:
    a. increased HR and peripheral resistance leads to hypertension
    b. insulin resistance leads to endothelial dysfunction, leading to vessel narrowing and vasospasm, inducing hypertension
    c. vascular remodelling and pro-coagulation effect leads to the vessel narrowing causing hypertension
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6
Q

Outline the long-term effects of hypertension:

A
  • Myocardial injury
  • Coronary artery disease from accelerated atherosclerosis
  • Retention of sodium and increased BP due to renin-aldosterone secretion stimulated by the reduced blood flow in the kidneys
  • Renal failure
  • TIA, stroke, aneurysm from weakened vessel walls and accelerated atherosclerosis
  • Retinal vascular sclerosis
  • Gangrene in low extremities from accelerated atherosclerosis
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7
Q

Define hypotension and outline how it is treated:

A
  • BP below the normal range

- The underlying cause needs to be treated and fluids may be given to increase blood volume and BP

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8
Q

Name 3 causes to hypotension:

A
  • orthostatic hypotension
  • hypovolemia from:
    a. blood loss
    b. burns
    c. dehydration
    d. fluid shift
    e. diarrhoea
    f. vomiting
  • shock
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9
Q

Define shock:

A
  • shock is a state in which the supply of blood to the tissue is inadequate to meet the metabolic demand of the body
  • regardless of the cause & clinical manifestation; all types of shock result in acute circulation failure, which causes tissue hypoperfusion leading to cellular hypoxia and may causing tissue damage/organ failure
  • Shock can result from heart failure, sepsis or an allergic reaction
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