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Hemodynamics , Blood pressure and Microcirculation. Dr. Meg- angela Christi Amores. The Circulation. Functions: to transport nutrients to the body tissues to transport waste products away to conduct hormones from one part of the body to another
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Hemodynamics, Blood pressure and Microcirculation Dr. Meg-angela Christi Amores
The Circulation • Functions: • to transport nutrients to the body tissues • to transport waste products away • to conduct hormones from one part of the body to another • rate of blood flow through most tissues is controlled in response to tissue need for nutrients
Physical Characteristics • Arteries • transport blood under high pressure to the tissues • have strong vascular walls, high blood flow rate
Arterioles • last small branches of the arterial system • act as control conduits through which blood is released into the capillaries • capability of vastly altering blood flow in each tissue bed in response to the need of the tissue
Physical Characteristics • Capillaries • exchange fluid, nutrients, electrolytes, hormones, and other substances between the blood and the interstitial fluid • very thin and have numerous minute capillary pores permeable to water
Venules • collect blood from the capillaries, and they gradually coalesce into progressively larger veins • Veins • conduits for transport of blood from the venules back to the heart • Thin walled, muscular enough to expand or contract
The circulation • If all the systemic vessels of each type were put side by side, their approximate total cross-sectional areas for the average human being would be as follows: • Note larger cross sectional area of veins than arteries, explains large storage of blood in the venous system
velocity of blood flow is inversely proportional to vascular cross-sectional area • velocity averages about 33 cm/sec in the aorta but only 1/1000 as rapidly in the capillaries, about 0.3 mm/sec
Basic theory of Circulatory Function • The rate of blood flow to each tissue of the body is almost always precisely controlled in relation to the tissue need • The cardiac output is controlled mainly by the sum of all the local tissue flows • In general the arterial pressure is controlled independently of either local blood flow control or cardiac output control.
Blood flow - the quantity of blood that passes a given point in the circulation in a given period of time • expressed in milliliters per minute or liters per minute • overall blood flow in the total circulation of an adult person at rest is about 5000 ml/min
Factors affecting blood flow • pressure difference of the blood between the two ends of the vessel – pressure gradient • the force that pushes the blood through the vessel • the impediment to blood flow through the vessel – vascular resistance • Ohm’s law: • blood flow is directly proportional to the pressure difference but inversely proportional to the resistance
Ohm’s Law: F = P R F – blood flow P – pressure difference R - resistance
Laminar vs. Turbulent blood flow • Laminar flow • blood flows at a steady rate through a long, smooth blood vessel • flows in streamlines • each layer of blood remaining the same distance from the vessel wall • the central most portion of the blood stays in the center of the vessel
Laminar vs. Turbulent blood flow • Turbulent flow • blood flowing in all directions in the vessel and continually mixing within the vessel • When the rate of blood flow becomes too great • when it passes by an obstruction in a vessel • when it makes a sharp turn • when it passes over a rough surface • Increased resistance to blood flow
Resistance to blood flow • Resistance - the impediment to blood flow in a vessel, but it cannot be measured by any direct means • Conductance - measure of the blood flow through a vessel for a given pressure difference • Slight changes in the diameter of a vessel cause tremendous changes in conductance Conductance = Diameter4
Resistance to blood flow • Poiseuille’s Law • the rate of blood flow is directly proportional to the fourth power of the radius of the vessel • the diameter of a blood vessel (which is equal to twice the radius) plays by far the greatest role of all factors in determining the rate of blood flow through a vessel F= π Pr4 8ήl
In large diameter vessels, with laminar flow, the velocity is different in concentric rings • the blood that is near the wall of the vessel flows extremely slowly, whereas that in the middle of the vessel flows extremely rapidly
Effects of pressure • Increase in arterial pressure: • increases the force that pushes blood through the vessels • distends the vessels at the same time, which decreases vascular resistance
Vascular Distensibility • all blood vessels are distensible • the distensible nature of the arteries allows them to accommodate the pulsatile output of the heart and to average out the pressure pulsations • most distensible by far of all the vessels are the veins, providing a reservoir function for storing large quantities of extra blood
Arterial Pulse Pulsations • Because of vascular distensibility, blood flow is continuous, with systole and diastole • Blood does not flow instantaneously in the peripheral circulation all at once • Pressure pulsations: • Systolic pressure – 120mmHg – pressure at top of each pulse • Diastolic pressure - 80mmHg – at the lowest point of each pulse • Pulse pressure – difference between SP and DP
Methods in determining BP • Direct method: • direct catheter measurement from inside the arteries • Most accurate • impractical
Methods in determining BP • Auscultatory method • Stethoscope over antecubital area • BP cuff inflated over upper arm • Korotkoff sounds • Mechanism: • When cuff pressure is higher than systolic P, brachial artery remains occluded • As cuff pressure is reduced, blood jets through the artery, hearing tapping sounds from antecubital artery • When cuff pressure is equal diastolic pressure, blood no longer jets through squeezed artery, tapping stops
To be continued..... • Next topic: Control of BP
Nervous control of BP • Autonomic nervous system • Sympathetic NS – most important regulator • Leave SC through Thoracic and L1 and L2 spinal nerves • To the sympathetic chain • Innervates all vessels except capillaries, precapillary sphincters and metarterioles • capability to cause rapid increases in arterial pressure
Nervous control of BP • 3 major changes: • Almost all arterioles of the systemic circulation are constricted • The veins especially (but the other large vessels of the circulation as well) are strongly constricted. • Finally, the heart itself is directly stimulated by the autonomic nervous system, further enhancing cardiac pumping
Nervous control of BP • the most rapid of all our mechanisms for pressure control • often increasing the pressure to two times normal within 5 to 10 seconds
Nervous control • During exercise • motor areas of the brain become activated to cause exercise, most of the reticular activating system of the brain stem is also activated • increased stimulation of the vasoconstrictor and cardioacceleratory areas of the vasomotor center • During stress • In extreme fright, the arterial pressure sometimes rises to as high as double • Called alarm reaction
Reflex mechanisms for maintaining normal BP • Autonomic nervous system • Mostly Negative feedback reflex mechanisms • Baroreceptor Reflexes • Initiated by stretch receptors in large systemic arteries • Inc arterial pressure stretches baroreceptors • Sends signals to CNS • Negative feedback signals are sent back
Baroreceptor reflex • Locations: • Internal Carotid artery bifurcation – carotid sinus • Wall of Aortic Arch • Signals enter tractussolitarius of the medulla • Inhibit vasomotor center and excite vagal parasympathetic center • Effects: vasodilatation of arteries and veins decreased heartrate and heart contraction
Baroreceptor reflex • During changes in posture • Upon standing, arterial pressure in head falls, causing loss of consciousness • Prevented by the reflex, causing strong sympathetic discharge throughout the body
Long term control of BP • Which organ regulates arterial pressure in the long term?
Renal-Body Fluid System for Arterial Pressure Control • two primary determinants • The degree of pressure shift of the renal output curve for water and salt • The level of the water and salt intake line • Role of NaCl • When there is excess salt in the extracellular fluid, the osmolality of the fluid increases stimulates the thirst center in the brain • stimulates the hypothalamic-posterior pituitary gland secretory mechanism to secrete increased quantities of antidiuretic hormone
MICROCIRCULATION • Where the most purposeful function of the circulation occurs • transport of nutrients to the tissues and removal of cell excreta • CAPILLARIES • walls of the capillaries are extremely thin, constructed of single-layer, highly permeable endothelial cells
Microcirculation • 10 billion capillaries with a total surface area estimated to be 500 to 700 square meters (about one-eighth the surface area of a football field) • Nutrient artery – arterioles – metarteriole –precapillary sphincter - capillaries
Flow of blood through capillaries • Intermittent – turning on and off every few seconds • Phenomenon of VASOMOTION – intermittent contraction of metarterioles and sphincter • Physiologic significance: • most important factor found thus far to affect the degree of opening and closing of the metarterioles and precapillary sphincters is the concentration of oxygen in the tissue.
Transcapillary movement • Diffusion • Lipid-Soluble Substances Can Diffuse Directly Through the Cell Membranes of the Capillary Endothelium • Water-Soluble, Non-Lipid-Soluble Substances Diffuse Only Through Intercellular "Pores" in the Capillary Membrane.
Transcapillary movement • Effect of Molecular Size on Passage Through the Pores • width of the capillary intercellular cleft-pores, 6 to 7 nanometers, is about 20 times the diameter of the water molecule, which is the smallest molecule that normally passes through the capillary pores • Effect of Concentration Difference on Net Rate of Diffusion Through the Capillary Membrane.
Lymphatics • What is lymph? • derived from interstitial fluid that flows into the lymphatics • protein concentration in the interstitial fluid of most tissues averages about 2 g/dl • protein concentration in the interstitial fluid of most tissues averages about 2 g/dl, • lymph formed in the intestines has a protein concentration as high as 3 to 4 g/dl
Most of the fluid filtering from the arterial ends of bloodcapillaries flows among the cells and finally is reabsorbed back into the venous ends of the blood capillaries; but on the average, about 1/10 of the fluid instead enters the lymphatic capillaries and returns to the blood through the lymphatic system rather than through the venous capillaries.
Lymphatics • one of the major routes for absorption of nutrients from the gastrointestinal tract, especially for absorption of virtually all fats in food • special lymph channels that drain excess fluid directly from the interstitial spaces • all the lymph vessels from the lower part of the body eventually empty into the thoracic duct • total quantity of all this lymph is normally only 2 to 3 liters each day.