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PHYS3

The Vascular System

QuestionAnswer
ARTERIES ARTERIES
What kind of walls do the systemic arteries and aeorta have? Thick walls made of eleastic tissue and smooth muscle
What is the function of the arteries? Low resistance tubes and pressure reservoirs
What is the purpose of the pressure reservoirs? Maintain blood flow in ventricular relaxation
What is systolic pressure? Max arterial pressure in a cardiac cycle
What is diastolic pressure? Minimum arterial pressure
What is pulse pressure? Difference b/w systolic and diastolic pressure
What happens to the volume of the arteries in systole? Increases
In diastole? Decreases; come on, it is relaxing, dude!!
Mean arterial pressure: Average pressure in a cycle
How is it calculated? MAP = Dbp + {(Sbp-Dbp)/3}
What is Sbp = Dbp? Pulse Pressure
What kind of change occurs in arterial pressure with age? Why? Increase in arterial pressure due to decrease in complainance
What's the only thing that remains constant with age? What happens to the thickness of arterial wall with age? What does this lead to? Stroke volume! With age, wall becomes ticker, so it is harder to increase volume with the pressure you had, so you increase pressure
How would one measure compliance? Change in volume over change in Pressure (C = (V/P)
What preassure can comliance influence? Can't influence? Pulse pressure; can't influence MAp
If you make a small change to the volume, what kind of a change will the pressure undergo? Large change in pressrue
ARTERIOLES ARTERIOLES
What are arterioles? Function, that is? resistance to flow in vascular system
What are their two major roles? Distribute flows to various organs and tissues and determine MAP
What is the Flow in a organ equation? P = F x R; like ohms law: v=I R
What is the MAP of the kidneys vs. the lungs? It is similar
So where does the difference in flow come from? From the ressitance of the arterioles of the organs
What happens to flow as resistance decreases? Flow increases
What are arterioles made of? Smooth muscle
What happens to the vessel radius as the vessel relaxes? It increases
What is this called? Vasodialation
Give an example: Skelatal muscle during excercise to increase blood flow
Is this localized of systemic? LOcalized, baby!
What does vasoconstriction do? Decrease radius and, therefore, blood flow
What kind of a change (localized vs. generalized) is a change in blood pressure? Generalized
What whappens ot eh pressure in vasodialation? It decreases
How is arterioral ressitance dtermined? Local factors and by reflex neural and hormonal input
What are local factors AKA? What are the three types? Functional SMTH...; the three kinds are Active, Flow auto regulation, and reactive hyperemia
Active hyperemia: Why do they happen? Increase in blood flow to organs and tissues; b/c local factors from an increase in metabolic activity
Give an example ofa n active hypermia incident? EXCERCISE, BABY
What is flow autoregulation? Change in resistance in an organ that keeps flow constant when bp changes.
What is it due to? local metabolic factors
What implemetns flow autoregulation? Brain and kidney
What doesn't do this? How does the brain hold blood flow constant? SKIN; flow is constant through extreme arterial pressure
Reactive hyperemia? Increase in blood flow to an organ tissue
What does this follow? Occlusion of flow
What's the best thing to do fi pressure falls?? Keep the flow constant
EXTRINSIC CONTROLS EXTRINSIC
How are arterioles innervated? What do they cause? Vioa what? sympathetic nerves cause vasoconstriction via alpha adrenergic receptors
What can EPI cause? Dialation or constriction of arterioles? EPI can cause vasodilation via b-adrenergic and contstriction bia alpha
If you have a low amount of EPI, what is more likely to hapen? dialation or constriction? Dilation
What hormes can serve as extrinsic controlers? Angiotensin II and vasopressin
What is the role of endothelial cells? Vaso constriction or dialatioN/ Release EDRF-->vasodialation
What is vasopressin AKA? ADH
What does the release of Nitric oxide lead to? Goes to smooth muslceand constricts it
What chemicals can lead to vasodialiation, then? About all chemicals lead to vasodialation
SEE FIG. 12-36- MEMORIZE
P. 223 P. 223
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CAPILLARIES CAPILLARIES
What percent of circulating blood are they? 5 %
What is the purpsoe of the capilllaries? They do ltos of exchange of nutrients and waste stuff
How long of a diffusion distance do they have? Short distance
How is capillary blood flow determined? Resistance of arterioles supplying the capillaries and by the number of open precapillary sphincters
What is the speed of blood flow in capillaries? Why? Slowly; b/x of the large cross sectional area, so wider
Analogy to understand above? The wider the river, the slower the flow
What does the diffusion allow exchange b/w/? capillary plasma and interstatiatial fluid
What kind of stuff goes through capillary fast? slow? Fast: lipid soluble, alcohol; slow: polar, lipid insoluble: ions...etc.
What can lipid soluble substance dmore across? All endothelial wall
Ionas and polar molecules jmove through? water-filled intercellular clefts or fused vescile channels
EXTRA EXTRA
How fast do Plasma proteins move accross membranes? Very slowl
Why does a diffusion gradient arise? Cell utilization and production of a substance
BULK FLOW BULK FLOW
Bulk flow of ------ OR ----- across capillaries determines the distribution of extracellular fluid b/w these two fluid compartments. Protein free plasma or interstitial fluid
From what to what does filtration go? What does filtration favor? From Plasma to IF; hydrostatic pressure difference b/w the capillary and the interstitial fluid
Absorption goes from what to what? What favors absorption ? From IF to Plasma; favored by Plasma protein concentration difference b/w the plasma and the interstitial fluid
In a normal situation, is there more filtration or absorption/ more filtration than absorption
What is the role of solutes in the arteries? Thehy make osmotic force
What is the osmotic force provided by? Protein
What is the pressure when you increase protein in vessel? 25 mg Hg
What is equation of the total pressure? 2hydrostatic and 2osmotic
VEINS VEINS
What is the resistance and main function of veins? Low resistance condiuts for venous return
What contains most of the bloodd in vascuar system? Veins
Vein diameters are reflexly altered by --------------- and ----------------? Syumpatheticv vasoconstriction or vasodialiation
What two thing increase venous pressure locally and enhance venous reutrn? Skeletal muscle pump and respiratory pump
What is the permit of venous valves? Prevent backflow
LYPMATHIC SYSTEM LYMPATHIC SYSTEM
What is the lymphatic system componsed of? lymph nodes lymphatic,k vessels
Flymph travels though ?????? lymphatic vessels
What is the lymph fluid made of? interstitial fluid
What is the purpose of the lymphatic system? Return exess fluid derifer fo fluid.
What is lymph flow driven by? Where? What is a secondary flow? smooth muscle contraction in the lymph vessels. Also driven by skeletal muslce pump and respiratory pump
VEINS AGAIN VEINS AGAIN
What kind of pressure do veins have? LWhat about volume? Low pressure, hugh volume
What is the point of the lymphatic sytem? Return leaked out fluid (IF) to the cardiovascular system
Created by: talkglitter2486
 

 



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