21-Blood Vessels and Hemodynamics Flashcards

0
Q

Layers of all blood vessels - 3

A

Tunica interna - Endothelium, elastic lamina for diffusion
Tunica Media - Smooth muscle, vasoconstriction, elastic lamina
Tunica Externa - contains nerves and blood vessels (vaso vasorum), anchors to surrounding tissue

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
1
Q

Main blood vessel types - 5

A
Arteries - take blood away from heart
Arterioles - arteries to capillaries, controls blood pressure
Capillaries - nutrient and gas exchange
Venules - capillary to vein
Veins - take blood to the heart
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

6 Elastic arteries

A
Aorta
Pulmonary Trunk
Brachiocephalic
Subclavian
Common Carotid
Common iliac
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Arteriole functions - 4

A

Regulate blood flow into capillary
Regulate resistance, therefore BP, using sphincter. Vasomotion.
Metarteriole tapers to capillary
Vasoconstriction, vasodilation changes BP

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

More capillaries needed where, amount typically in use at a time

A

More needed for high metabolic demands (brain, liver, kidney)
25%

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

3 capillary types based on leakiness

A

Continuous - CNS, lungs, skin, muscle - no proteins cross
Fenestrated - small holes, kidneys, sm. intestines, endocrine glands
Sinusoids - large holes, proteins and RBCs can cross - red marrow, liver, spleen

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

Types of Venules - 2

A

Postcapillary - allows white blood cell migration, nutrient exchange
Muscular - Reservoir for large amount of blood storage

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

Osmosis - 3 things needed

3 types of pressure

A

Water movement, through a membrane, from lower to higher solute concentration
Osmotic pressure - due to different solute concentrations, solute Pulls the water
Hydrostatic pressure - Like BP, Pushes the water
Filtration pressure - Osmotic plus Hydrostatic summed

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

Capillary Exchange occurs 3 ways

A

Diffusion - with concentration gradient
Transcytosis - endocytosis and exocytosis
Bulk Flow - Pressure driven flow, liquids and solutes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

Bulk Flow parts and process - 7

A

Blood contains Albumin protein, does not pass membrane
On arteriole side, BP pushes liquids and ions and nutrients to ISF due to Hydrostatic. Can also be some osmotic pushing same way. Filtration.
On veinous side, BP lower, osmotic pressure pushes liquids and “wastes” ISF to blood. Reabsorption.
Left over fluids go into lymph. If lymph cannot handle all, Edema.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Systemic Edema - why

A

Reduced Albumin protein in blood, so Hydrostatic pressure pushes fluids out of blood, but Osmotic pressure does not pull enough back into blood. Lymph is overwhelmed.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

Blood flow - 2 factors, 3 reasons for one, SVR

A

Pressure difference
Resistance - lumen size, blood viscosity, vessel length
Systemic Vascular Resistance - arterioles more than other vessels

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

Venous return - 3 factors

A

Left Ventricle - pressure pushes blood around
Skeletal muscle pumps - legs major factor
Respiratory pump - lungs

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

Varicose veins - 3

A

Incompetent valves
Physical activity best way to hold off
Great Saphenous Vein likely - little muscle to pump, longest vein in body

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Circulation Time, and define circulation

A

Circulation is drop of blood starting at right Atrium, traveling to foot, and back to right Atrium.
One minute.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Control of blood pressure and blood flow 1 + 5

A

Cardiovascular Center in Medulla
Baroreceptors, Chemoreceptors, proprioceptors
Cardiac accelerator nerves (sympathetic)
Vagus Nerve (X) parasympathetic

16
Q

Baroreceptor reflexes - 2

A

Carotid sinus reflex - glossopharyngeal nerve (IX), for brain pressure
Aortic sinus reflex - systemic pressure, Vagus (X) nerve

17
Q

Chemoreceptors

A

Excess CO2 - hypercapnia, stimulates CV center

Also input to Respiratory center

18
Q

Hormonal control of blood pressure

A

Epi and NorEpi increase heart rate and force of contraction

19
Q

Autoregulation of blood pressure - 2 + 2

A

Physical - warmth causes vasodilation, cold causes vasoconstriction
Vasodilation and Vasoconstriction chemicals
Low O2 causes systemic dilation, pulmonary constriction

20
Q

Pulse rate - normal, low, high rates, names

A

Normal 60-100 beats per minute
Tachycardia above 100 beats per minute
Bradycardia below 50 beats per minute

21
Q

Shock types - 4+3

A

Hypovolemic - blood loss, external trauma
Cardiogenic - heart attack - infarction
Vascular - decrease in SVR, anaphylactic (allergy), neurogenic (head/CV trauma), Septic (bacterial toxins)
Obstructive - block, embolism

22
Q

Largest artery - 4 parts

A

Ascending Aorta - L&R coronary arteries
Arch of the Aorta - Brachiocephalic trunk (R common carotid, R subclavian), L common carotid, L subclavian. R&L vertebral off subclavian
Thoracic Aorta - Descending, to diaphragm
Abdominal Aorta - to R&L common iliac arteries. Branches Celiac trunk, Superior Mesenteric, Inferior Mesenteric.

23
Q

Vertebral arteries - branches from, passes through, forms

A

Branches off of R&L subclavian arteries
passes through vertebral transverse foramen, through foramen magnum
Unite to form basilar artery

24
Q

Subclavian becomes - 6, posterior versus anterior

A

Subclavian -> axial -> brachial -> radial, ulnar -> superficial & deep palmar arch.
radial feeds posterior
ulnar feeds anterior

25
Q

Arteries used for bypass surgery

A

Posterior intercostal arteries

26
Q

Abdominal aortic branches off of, and what they feed - 7

A
Celiac trunk - foregut
Superior mesenteric artery - midgut
Inferior mesenteric artery - hindgut
Suprarenal arteries (3) - adrenal
Renal artery - kidneys
Gonadal (testicular or ovarian) - gonads
Median sacral artery - sacrum, coccyx
27
Q

Continuation of common iliac - 8

A

Common iliac -> external iliac & internal iliac
external iliac -> femoral & deep femoral
femoral -> popliteal -> anterior & posterior tibial
posterior tibial -> fibular (lateral leg)

28
Q

Exceptions to rule veins follow arteries - 2

A

Internal Jugular veins drain brain - dural sinuses

Great saphenous veins - medial leg, longest veins, not well supported by muscle, likely to varicose.

29
Q

Renal veins - longer, drains into it - 3

A

Left is longer, crosses over abdominal aorta

Left renal drains left suprarenal vein, left testicular/ovarian vein, left inferior phrenic vein

30
Q

Hepatic portal circulation -

A

Splenic & superior mesenteric vein drain into hepatic portal vein into liver for nutrients
Hepatic artery feeds along side for O2
L&R hepatic veins leave liver, feed into inferior vena cava

31
Q

Fetal circulation - not functioning, mixing with maternal

A

Lungs, kidneys, GI tract not functioning

Maternal and fetal blood do not mix. Placenta passes nutrients/wastes between.

32
Q

Fetal circulation - systemic

A

From internal iliac artery to placenta via umbilical artery
Placenta via umbilical vein with O2, two branches -> liver, ductus venosus to inferior vena cava, intermingles O2 and not.

33
Q

Fetal circulation heart - 2

A

Blood into right atrium crosses to left atrium via foramen ovale
Any pumped out right ventricle is passed pulmonary trunk to aorta via ductus arteriosus

34
Q

Changes in infant after umbilical cord tied off - 5

A

Umbilical artery -> medial umbilical ligament
Umbilical vein -> ligamentum teres (round ligament)
Ductus venosus -> ligamentum venosum
Foramen ovale -> fossa ovalis
Ductus arteriosus -> ligamentum arteriosum