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Lesson 11: Circulation and Hemodynamics This lesson contains 29 slides plus 2 multiple-choice questions. This lesson was derived from pages 53 through 58 in the textbook: MAJOR SYSTEMS OF CARDIOVASCULAR CIRCULATION Cardiopulmonary Systemic The two major systems of cardiovascular circulation in the body are cardiopulmonary and systemic. The cardiopulmonary system includes the heart and lungs. The systemic (peripheral) system includes any vessel that lies outside the thorax and abdomen. The peripheral vascular system includes any vessel that lies outside the thorax and abdomen. These are all of the veins and arteries in the body that are located in the head, neck, arms, legs and penis. SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION Systemic circulation is the movement of blood from the left side of the heart, through the body, and back to the right side of the heart. It supplies oxygenrich blood to all body organs. The beating heart propels blood into large arteries, then into successively smaller arteries, and then into the arterioles (the smallest branch of the arterial system), which feed the capillaries, which are tiny blood vessels. It is in the capillary beds that gas exchange occurs with the tissues, and the oxygen-rich blood becomes oxygen-deficient. The capillary beds are drained of the oxygen-depleted blood by venules, which, in turn, empty into veins that finally empty into the vena cava, which enters the heart. SYSTEMIC CIRCULATION Systemic circulation is the movement of blood from the left side of the heart, through the body, and back to the right side of the heart. It supplies oxygenrich blood to all body organs. The beating heart propels blood into large arteries, then into successively smaller arteries, and then into the arterioles (the smallest branch of the arterial system), which feed the capillaries, which are tiny blood vessels. It is in the capillary beds that gas exchange occurs with the tissues, and the oxygen-rich blood becomes oxygen-deficient. The capillary beds are drained of the oxygen-depleted blood by venules, which, in turn, empty into veins that finally empty into the vena cava, which enters the heart. HEMODYNAMICS Hemodynamics is the study of the movements of blood and the forces concerned therein. TOTAL PERIPHERAL RESISTANCE Total peripheral resistance (TPR) is the resistance to blood flow through the various tissues of the body. The total peripheral resistance determines the rate at which blood flows out of the arterial vessels through the arterioles. Hemodynamics of Arterial and Venous Circulation ENERGY Kinetic energy Potential energy Total fluid energy Energy is the capacity for doing work and for overcoming resistance. The concepts of energy important to hemodynamics are kinetic energy, potential energy, and total fluid energy. ENERGY Kinetic Energy Kinetic energy is the energy of something in motion and is related to the principles of inertia. Inertia is the tendency for an object at rest to remain at rest. It is also the tendency for a moving object to continue moving in the direction in which it was going rather than modify its course. The two factors of mass and velocity determine how much kinetic energy is present. ENERGY Potential energy Potential energy is the energy of something at rest rather than in motion. In hemodynamics, potential energy has several components. It is a combination of intravascular pressure and gravitational potential energy. The pumping action of the heart’s muscle is the dominant source of the intravascular component of potential energy. The hydrostatic pressure is the pressure exerted by a fluid within a closed system. ENERGY Potential energy The hydrostatic pressure is the pressure exerted by a fluid within a closed system. The static filling pressure is the pressure that exists because of the relationship between the amount of blood in a vessel and the elasticity of the vessel walls. Gravitational potential energy is the capacity of a quantity of blood to do work, based on its position above a specified reference point (the right atrium). Hydrostatic pressure and gravitational potential energy usually cancel each other out. TOTAL FLUID ENERGY Combination of the kinetic energy (blood flow) and the potential energy (blood pressure) present. Total fluid energy is the combination of the kinetic energy (blood flow) and the potential energy (blood pressure) present. POISEUILLE’S LAW gradient: the difference in pressure (pressure drop) between the two ends of a vessel or the difference in pressure across a valve To move blood from one point to another requires an energy gradient. As blood moves toward the periphery, energy is dissipated, but is continually restored by the heart’s pumping action. Poiseuille’s Law provides an equation that is analogous to Ohm’s Law by relating the flow rate with the pressure, viscosity, vessel radius and length. The use of Poiseuille’s Law assumes that the vessel is a small artery or arteriole. PRESSURE GRADIENT P P is the pressure gradient. It is normally expressed as mm Hg. FLOW Q Flow (Q) is the volume of blood passing through a vessel per unit of time. Blood flow is always from an area of higher pressure to an area of lower pressure. The contraction of the heart imparts pressure to the blood, but because of resistance (due to frictional losses), the pressure decreases as blood flows through a vessel. The rate of flow is determined by the gradient between the two ends of a vessel, rather than the absolute pressures. Volume flow (Q) is normally expressed in cc/sec or mL/sec. RESISTANCE R The resistance (R) is a measure of the hindrance to blood flow through a vessel caused by friction between the moving fluid and the stationary vascular walls. The resistance to blood flow depends on the viscosity (ƞ) of the blood, the length (L) of the vessel, and the radius (r) of the vessel. Generally, resistance and flow are opposite factors, that is, when one increases the other decreases. RESISTANCE R Since vessel lengths remain constant in the body, they are not a factor in the control of resistance. However, since resistance is directly proportional to vessel length, a longer vessel would produce a greater resistance to flow. The radius is the most important determinant of changes in resistance. According to Poiseuille’s equation, the resistance increases to the fourth power as the radius decreases. STROKE VOLUME SV Stroke volume (SV) is the volume of blood pumped out of a ventricle with each heartbeat. It is the difference between the final ventricle filling volume (end diastolic volume) and the final ventricle emptying volume (end systolic volume). The typical resting stroke volume is about 70 mL. VISCOCITY VISCOSITY (Internal friction) The viscosity (ƞ) is the internal friction existing between the contiguous layers of a fluid, developed between its molecules as they slide over each other. As the layers of red blood cells rub against each other, energy is lost in the form of heat. The greater the viscosity, the greater the resistance to flow. The hematocrit (volume of blood cells) and the concentration of plasma proteins determine the viscosity of blood. Increasing hematocrit increases blood viscosity. VASCULAR RESISTANCE RESISTANCE IN THE VASCULAR SYSTEM Aorta Large Arteries Main Branches Terminal branches Arterioles Capillaries Total venous 4% 5% 10% 6% 41% 27% 7% Most of the resistance in the vascular system comes from the arterioles. These vessels have a muscular lining and can vasoconstrict and vasodilate and therefore regulate resistance to flow. FLOW PATTERNS • plug •laminar (parabolic) • disturbed • turbulent Basic types of flow patterns that can be demonstrated in blood vessels include plug flow, laminar flow, disturbed flow, and turbulent flow. PLUG FLOW • occurs during systole in large vessels During systole in the large vessels, blood is pushed like a large plug with only the boundary layer remaining stationary. The layers of blood accelerate at the same rate with a relatively flat velocity profile. With this plug flow, the center 50% of a vessel may contain one very large layer of blood, with all blood cells moving at the same velocity. LAMINAR FLOW • thought to exist in the majority of vessels During laminar flow, blood moves smoothly at a constant rate, sliding over itself in concentric, orderly layers. Each layer increases slightly in velocity from the wall of a vessel (where there are greater frictional forces) to its center (where there are lower frictional forces). The velocity of blood is the actual linear motion of the blood cells within the blood vessel. This is due to red blood cells migrating toward center stream while leaving the less viscous plasma along the wall. The orderly flow conserves greatly the kinetic energy contained in the moving blood. Laminar flow, which is thought to exist in the majority of vessels of uniform diameter, can be described as having a parabolic velocity profile. DISTURBED FLOW • caused by high peak velocities, curving, branching, and divergence • often produces bruits Disturbed flow is a deviation from laminar flow consisting of oscillatory variations in direction or the formation of vortices. Vortices are elements of rotational flow often seen with flow separations and disturbance, and often comprising a wide range of velocities aligned in two directions along a line passing through its center. High peak velocities may cause disturbance of blood flow. Disturbance may also be caused by curving, branching, and divergence of vessels, or by projections into the vessel lumen. TURBULENT FLOW • often at the location of a stenosis • significant pressure gradients are present antegrade: moving or extending forward in the direction of blood flow or with the normal direction of blood flow retrograde: backward flow, backward filling, or against the normal direction of flow stenosis: the narrowing or constriction of a blood vessel When turbulent flow is present, blood is moving in a swirling fashion. It may contain blood moving in a direction opposite to that of normal flow, or it may be disorganized, with blood flow chaotically oriented in many directions simultaneously both antegrade and retrograde. Turbulence often appears at the exit point of a stenosis. The increased friction and inertia losses associated with turbulence cause significant pressure gradients across the stenosis. Turbulence accounts for great reductions in the energy of moving blood. BERNOULLI EFFECT The Bernoulli Effect describes the relationship between changes in fluid flow and changes in pressure energy. Q=VxA (flow = velocity x area) The Bernoulli Effect, when applied to peripheral vessels, is the reduction in pressure that accompanies an increase in velocity of fluid flow. It explains the large drop in pressure across stenotic vessels, which occurs due to the change in the direction of flow caused by the turbulence. BERNOULLI EFFECT A reduction in pressure accompanies an increase in the velocity of fluid flow. According to the “Bernoulli Principle”, if the flow rate is constant, a decrease in area causes an increase in velocity. As velocity increases, there is a corresponding increase in kinetic energy and a decrease in pressure. The loss of energy due to the Bernoulli Effect is responsible for the lower pressure downstream from the stenosis. CRITICAL STENOSIS • causes a significant reduction in the amount of blood flow distal to the location of the stenosis A critical stenosis is an area of disease within a vessel, which causes a significant reduction in the amount of blood flow distal to the location of the stenosis. The degree of stenosis characterized as significant varies from one blood vessel to another. CRITICAL STENOSIS abdominal aorta 90% area reduction carotid artery 75% area reduction In the abdominal aorta, a 90% reduction (10% remaining) in area is required before the stenosis is critical, while in the carotid artery a 75% reduction (25% remaining) in area is characterized as critical. A 75% area reduction is equivalent to a 50% diameter reduction, often called a 50% stenosis. HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE Hydrostatic pressure is the variation in the body, which occurs when one part of the body is at a different elevation than another. This variation arises because of the gravitational potential energy of the blood. The blood has a higher potential energy when it is at a higher elevation. The higher elevation blood pushes down on the blood at lower elevations. An individual in a standing position has a high hydrostatic venous pressure compared to when he or she is lying down. When pressure measurements are performed, the patient is using lying down, often permitting hydrostatic pressures to be ignored. The venous system is responsible for the return of oxygen deficient blood to the heart. Normally, the average pressure in the veins is only 2 mm Hg, compared to the much higher average arterial pressure of approximately 100 mm Hg. The low pressure is insufficient for venous return of blood to the heart. This is particularly true for venous return from the lower extremities. Instead, venous return is regulated by contraction of the surrounding skeletal muscles. Contractions of muscles that encase the calf form a “calf muscle pump” that propels venous blood upward, while lowering venous pressures and volumes in the extremity. Answers to the following TWO practice questions were derived from material in the textbook: Question 1 The two MAJOR systems of cardiovascular circulation are: pulmonary and circulatory cardiopulmonary and pulmonic systemic and diastolic cardiopulmonary and systemic Page 53 Question 2 The MOST important determinant of changes in a vessel’s resistance is: elasticity radius viscosity length Pages 54 and 55 END OF LESSON 11