Lecture 11: Arterial venous lymphatic systems Flashcards

1
Q

Vascular distensibility equation

A

VD= Increase in volume/ Increase in pressure X original volume

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2
Q

Vascular distensibility in arteries vs veins

A

Veins are 8x more distensible than arteries
Pulmonary vein distensibility is same as systemic veins
Pulmonary arteries are 6x more distensible than systemic arteries

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3
Q

Vascular compliance equations

A
VC= Increase in volume/Increase in pressure
VC= VD x Original volume
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4
Q

Capacitance describes the

A

Distensibility of blood vessels - how volume changes in response to a change in pressure

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5
Q

Capacitance is directly proportional to _______ and indirectly proportional to ______

A

Directly proportional to volume, indirectly proportional to pressure

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6
Q

Capacitance is much greater for ______ than for ______

A

Greater for veins than for arteries

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7
Q

The greater the amount of elastic tissue in a blood vessel…

A

The higher the elastance

The lower the compliance

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8
Q

Vascular compliance is the

A

Total quantity of blood that can be stored in a given portion of the circulatory system

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9
Q

Pulse pressure equation

A

PP= Stroke volume/arterial compliance

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10
Q

Factors affecting pulse pressure

A

Stroke volume output of the heart (most important factor)

Compliance of the arterial tree

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11
Q

Conditions causing abnormal contours of the pressure pulse wave

A

Aortic valve stenosis
Arteriosclerosis
Patent ductus arteriosus
Aortic regurgitation

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12
Q

Aortic valve stenosis

A

Diameter of the aortic valve opening is reduced significantly, and the aortic pulse pressure is decreased significantly
Blood flow through the aortic valve is diminished

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13
Q

Patent ductus arteriosus

A

Half or more of the cardiac output flows back into the pulmonary artery and lung blood vessels
Diastolic pressure falls very low before next heartbeat

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14
Q

Aortic regurgitation

A

The aortic valve is absent or will not close completely

Aortic pressure may fall all the way to 0 b/w heartbeats

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15
Q

The progressive reduction of the pulsations in the periphery=

A

Damping of the pressure pulses

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16
Q

Mean arterial pressure equation

A

MAP= Diastolic pressure + 1/3 pulse pressure

17
Q

Central venous pressure equals

A

Pressure in the right atrium

18
Q

Factors that regulate right atrial pressure

A

Ability of the heart to pump blood out of the right atrium/ventricle
Tendency of blood to flow into the right atrium

19
Q

Factors that increase venous return/right atrial pressure

A

Increased blood volume
Increased peripheral venous pressures due to increased large vessel tone
Dilation of arterioles

20
Q

Arterioles

A

Small arterioles control blood flow to each tissue
Local conditions in tissue control diameters of arterioles
Arterioles are highly muscular

21
Q

Capillaries

A

Smooth muscle fiber encircles capillary at point where it originates from a metarteriole (referred to as a precapillary sphincter)

22
Q

Capillary wall

A

Unicellular layer of endothelial cells
Thin basement membrane
0.5um thick
Internal capillary diameter 4-9um

23
Q

Vasomotion

A

Cyclical opening and closing of precapillary sphincters

24
Q

Slit pores

A

Capillaries
Intercellular clefts- spacing of 6-7nm
Allow for rapid diffusion of water, water-soluble ions and small solutes

25
Q

Plasmalemmal vesicles

A

In capillaries
Formed from caveolins
Play a role in endocytosis and transcytosis

26
Q

Some capillaries in these organs have pores

A

Liver, GI tract, kidneys

27
Q

Most important factor regulating vasomotion

A

Concentration of oxygen in the tissues

28
Q

These lipid soluble substances can diffuse readily through the capillary cell membranes

A

Oxygen
Carbon dioxide
Non lipid soluble diffuse through pores/clefts

29
Q

Rate of water diffusion through capillary is __x faster than flow of plasma within capillary

A

80x faster

30
Q

Passage of substances through interstitium is mostly through ________ rather than ________

A

Through diffusion rather than flow

-This is due to large number of proteoglycan filaments in interstitium

31
Q

Rivulets

A

Occasionally form in interstitium and allow fluid flow

32
Q

Starling forces determine

A

Direction of diffusion into or out of a capillary

33
Q

Four types of starling forces

A

Capillary pressure (outward force)
Interstitial fluid pressure (inward force)
Capillary plasma colloid osmotic pressure (inward force)
Interstitial fluid colloid osmotic pressure (outward force)

34
Q

Net filtration pressure

A

Sum of all four starling forces

35
Q

Capillary filtration coefficient

A

Takes into consideration the number and size of pores

Filtration= NFP x Kf (Kf=Capillary filtration coefficient)

36
Q

Lymph flow reaches maximum when

A

Interstitial pressure rises slightly above atmospheric pressure

37
Q

Factors that increase lymph flow (and also interstitial fluid pressure)

A

Elevated capillary hydrostatic pressure
Decreased plasma colloid osmotic pressure
Increased interstitial fluid colloid osmotic pressure
Increased permeability of capillaries

38
Q

Rate of lymph flow =

A

Interstitial fluid pressure X activity of lymphatic pump