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Cardiac Output Cardiac Output = Heart Rate X Stroke Volume CV 4 Stroke Volume = EDV – ESV = 135 ml – 65 ml = 70 ml i.e about ½ the volume remains in the left ventricle At rest: CO = 72 beats / min X 0.07 L/beat =5.0 L/min Blood volume in most people = ~5L CO in trained athletes can = 35 L/min Control of Heart Rate by Autonomic Nervous system To Understand cardiac output (CO) 1. What controls HR? 2. What controls SV? • SNS ↑ HR via β adrenergic receptors • PNS ↓ HR via muscarinic Ach receptors • Normal rhythm of the SA node is 100 beats/min • But, resting heart rate ~70 beats/min ¾PNS activity dominant at rest 1 Effect of epinephrine on pacemaker potential Epi Effect of Ach on Pacemaker potential Control 250 ms Ach 0.01 μm 0 cont -50 Evidence for involvement of cAMP How do Epi and Ach regulate pacemaker potential? Probability of funny Na+ channel being open recall β adrenergic receptor and muscarinic Ach receptor linked to cAMP pathway open probability Increase this much with cAMP Membrane voltage At this voltage 2 SA node cell • Conclusion – “funny” Na+ channel opening is regulated by the level of cAMP (in addition to hyperpolarization) Na+ β mAch Adeylate cyclase Gs Gi “funny” Na+ channel ATP cAMP ↑cAMP ↑ channel opening ↓cAMP ↓ channel opening • Therefore, HR controlled by SNS and PNS regulation of “funny” Na+ channel • As channel opening ↑, slope of pacemaker potential ↑ Other factors that can influence HR 1. Arterial pressure receptors (Baroreceptors) 2. Atrial pressure receptors We’ll come back to these later in blood pressure regulation 3 EDV & SV: Frank-Starling Mechansim • SV = End Diastolic Volume – End Systolic Volume EDV Blood flowing back to heart (venous return) ESV Effectiveness of heart pump (contractility) Stroke Volume (ml) • What controls Stroke Volume? 200 100 0 100 200 300 400 Ventricular end diastolic volume (ml) • Thus, any factor that ↑ venous return will increase cardiac output • Ventricle contracts more forcefully when it is filled to a larger volume • Why? More about venous return later – Length-tension relationship of cardiac muscle 4 Length-tension relationship of muscle 1 2 4 Relative tension 3 1.0 • At rest, cardiac muscle sarcomere length is less than optimal (about position 4 on previous graph) 2 3 4 0.5 • Therefore, filling ventricles with more blood stretches the sarcomeres 1 5 1.25 5 1.65 2 2.25 – They produce more force 3.65 Sarcomere length (μm) • How does SNS affect muscle contractility? Contractility Stroke Volume (ml) • ↑ SNS activity or Epi from adrenal gland →↑ force production at any EDV ↑SNS activity or ↑ Epi 200 L-type Ca++ Channel (dihdryopyride receptor) β Adeylate cyclase Gs Protein kinase A rest ATP 100 cAMP Ca++ 0 100 200 300 400 Ventricular end diastolic volume (ml) Ca++ pump SR Ryanodine receptor 5 In cardiac myocytes cAMP/Protein kinase A: 1. Increase L-type Ca++ channel opening 2. Increase RyR opening Both serve to increase cytoplasmic Ca++ and increase contraction Therefore factors affecting Stroke Volume: 1. EDV ¾ venous return & Frank-Starling mechanism 2. ESV ¾ Contractility, SNS and Epi 3. Increase Ca++ pump activity Serves to increase Ca++ clearance and increase relaxation baroreceptors End Diastolic Volume (Frank-Starling Mech) Sympathetic activity Blood Epinephrine Parasympathetic activity Heart Rate Stroke volume Relative Contributions of SNS and PNS to Heart Function PNS primarily to SA node, AV node and Atria → Mainly effect HR, small effect on atrial contractility SNS to all areas of heart → effects HR and contractility Cardiac Output 6 capillaries Vascular System arterioles venules arteries veins aorta vena cava Blood flow Diameter Wall Thickness 25 mm 2mm aorta 30 mm 1.5 mm 4 mm 1 mm vena cava artery 30 μm 5 mm 0.5 mm 6 μm vein 8 μm 0.5μm 20 μm 1 μm Flow (Q) = Δ pressure / resistance arteriole capillary venule Generated by the heart Function of volume & compliance Endothelium Elastic tissue Smooth muscle Fibrous tissue Blood vessels Blood flow must = cardiac output Q= CO = ΔP/R Proportion of vessel wall Major site of regulation 7 Aortic blood pressure for the whole CV system: P1 = mean arterial pressure (MAP) P2 = right aterial pressure ≈ 0 MAP = DP + 1/3 (SP – DP) = 75 + 1/3 (125 – 75) = 92 mmHg In response to the pulsatile contraction of the heart: pulses of pressure move throughout the vasculature, decreasing in amplitude with distance Compliance, Volume, Pressure Compliance = Δ volume / Δ pressure How stretchy is it? If very stretchy - low pressure required for change in volume If not stretchy - high pressure required for change in volume Aorta Recall: aorta and arteries high % elastic tissue 8 Blood flow Flow (Q) = Δ pressure / resistance MAP-RAP Generated by the heart Function of volume & compliance Blood vessels Flow must = cardiac output Q= CO = ΔP/R length Resistance = viscosity 8 ⎛ Lη ⎞ π ⎜⎝ r 4 ⎟⎠ radius • Length of blood vessels usually constant • Viscosity usually constant over short term Plasma includes water, ions, proteins, nutrients, hormones, wastes, etc. – Exceptions • Dehydration ↓ blood volume ↑ blood cell concentration • Change in Blood cell production η normal 45 hematocrit The hematocrit is the percent of the blood volume that is composed of RBCs (red blood cells). 55 9 Importance of vessel radius: Resistance ∝ 1 radius 4 ra is 2 times rb; Flow in A is 16 times flow in B Factors affecting vessel radius 1. Transmural pressure • Pressure difference across wall of vessel Poutside Pinside Eg during inspiration Po decrease therefore radius ↑ during valsalva maneuver Po increase therefore radius ↓ Resistance = 8 ⎛ Lη ⎞ π ⎜⎝ r 4 ⎟⎠ • Small change in radius → big change in resistance Factors affecting arteriole radius 2a Local Controls of radius • Depends on metabolic state of tissue – Active tissue • • • • ↓O2,↑ CO2 ↓pH ↑ adenosine ↑ K+ – all can lead to dilation of vessel and ↑ flow 10 Factors affecting arteriole radius 2b. Autoregulation • without any neural or endocrine signals vessels can control flow in response to pressure change Max Vessel Dilation • Autoregulation is a myogenic response – As flow increases, smooth muscle stretches • Opens stretch activated calcium channels • Smooth muscle contracts Normal Q (ml/min) Max Vessel Contraction Autoregulatory range 70 150 Press (mm Hg) Factors affecting arteriole radius 3. Sympathetic nervous system • most arterioles receive sympathetic postganglionic nerves vasoconstriction norepinephrine Smooth muscle contraction α1 Adrenergic receptors ↑ Intracellular Ca++ Notes on SNS activity and vessel radius a. Sympathetic tone • • ↑ SNS → vasoconstriction ↓ SNS → vasodilation b. Recall arterioles don’t receive parasympathetic Activation of phospholipase C Production of DAG & IP3 Enhance v-gated Ca++ channels Activate Protein Kinase C 11 Factors affecting arteriole radius 4a. Hormones • Circulating epinephrine from adrenal medulla – All blood vessels have α-adrenergic receptors to which causes constriction – most vessels also have β-adrenergic receptors • These cause vasodilation – But, for most vessels, • Exception – Blood vessels in skeletal muscle – the number of β receptors >> α receptors – Therefore if SNS or Epi is high, then these vessels dilate, even when the rest of the blood vessels constrict • the number of α-receptors >> β-receptors • Therefore, if SNS or Epi is high, constriction is dominant Factors affecting arteriole radius 4b. Other Hormones 1. 2. Angiotensin II released from kidney Anti-diuretic hormone (vasopressin) from posterior pituitary • 3. These two are vasoconstrictors Atrial naturetic peptide from the atria • This is a vasodilator We’ll come back to these 3 later renal physiology section Factors affecting arteriole radius Summary Neural Controls Sympathetic Nervous System Hormonal Controls Vasoconstrictors Epinephrine Angiotensin II Vasopressin Vasodilators Epinephrine Atrial Naturetic Peptide Local metabolic Controls: Vasodilators ↓ oxygen ↓ pH ↑ K+ ↑ CO2 ↑ adenosine Autoregulation Arteriole smooth muscle ↓ Arteriole radius 12 Venous Return • Different vascular beds have different importance of controls – Coronary & cerebral – local (metabolic) – Skin – neural – Muscle – neural, metabolic, hormonal • SNS can be used to regulate flow to different tissues • Factors Affecting Venous pressure 1. Transmural pressure 1. Muscle pumps 2. Respiratory pumps 2. SNS activity – ↑ SNS activity → venoconstriction → ↓ blood volume stored in veins → ↑ venous return – i.e. increased SNS activity in one tissue and reduced activity in another will redirect blood flow Muscle pumps and venous return Venous Return ↑ Sympathetic activity respiratory pump ↑ blood volume Skeletal muscle pumps ↑ venous pressure ↑ venous return ↑ EDV ↑ stroke volume 13 Q Blood flow Flow (Q) = CO = Δ pressure / resistance = MAP - RAP / TPR Q RAP ≈ 0 Aortic pressure MAP = HR x (EDV-ESV) x TPR CO = MAP / TPR MAP = CO x TPR VR Venous pressure SNS radius PNS MAP = HR x SV x TPR MAP = HR x (EDV-ESV) x TPR viscosity Blood volume Muscle pumps Respiration pump Hormones autoregulation Metabolic / local 14