Vasopressin Flashcards
When is vasopressin released?
High plasma osmolality and hypotension
High plasma osmolality is detected… what happens
Magnocellular neurones of SON depolarised
Vasopressin released
Increased water resorption in the distal nephron and collecting duct
Describe how the body transmits the message that there is hypotension to the hypothalamus
Baroreceptors detect
Decreased firing of atrial stretch receptors
Less signals transmitted via CN 9 and 10 to hypothalamus (these signals normally inhibit vasopressin release)
What happens if the circulating volume is low but of low osmolality?
Volume is preserved over tonicity so vasopressin is released in spite of hyponatraemia
Where is vasopressin synthesised?
Magnocellular neurosecretory neurones of the supra-optic nucelus
Paraventricular nucelus
Where is vasopressin stored?
Posterior pituitary
Where are V1 and V1a vasopressin receptors found and what occurs as a result of their activation?
Vascular smooth muscle (increased vasoconstricive effect in muscle, skin and fat relative to coronary, cerebral and mesenteric)
Platelets - thrombosis is facilitated
Kidneys - vasoconstriction of efferent arterioles so increased renal perfusion
Where are V2 receptors found and what happens if they are activated by vasopressin?
Kidneys
AQP2 channels inserted into apical membrane of collecting duct to increase intravascular volume
Where are V3/V1b receptors found and what happens when vasopressin activates them?
Anterior pituitary
ACTH is secreted leading to increased plasma cortisol (thought to increase successful defibrillation and chance of ROSC)
What is coronary perfusion pressure
Difference in diastolic aortic pressure and end diastolic LV pressure
It’s the pressure gradient that drives coronary blood pressure