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OBJECTIVES • Overview • Relationship between pressure and flow • Understand the differences between series and parallel circuits • Cardiac output and its distribution • Cardiac function • Control of blood pressure • Review of lab Berne and Levy 2005 Properties of Pressure • Hydrostatic pressure Pressure=0 cm water Hydraulic pressure Created by pushing fluid through a tube Pump H=100 cm Pressure=100 cm water Height of water column is~pressure Units of Pressure • Atmospheric pressure is considered to be zero • The common units is based upon the height of a column of mercury • Since mercury is 13.6 times denser than water a 100 mmHg is equivalent to 136 cm of water • In more common units 136 cm of water is equal to 54 inches or 4’6” of water 120 80 systolic Pressure (mmHg) mean diastolic What is a normal arterial pressure • Diastolic<80 mmHg • Systolic<140 mmHg • High blood pressure places a large strain on the arterial blood vessels • High blood pressure increases the work of the heart Blood moves down a tube if the inflowing pressure is greater than the outflowing pressure P=100 mmHg flow P=10 mmHg If resistance increases pressure has to increase if flow is kept constant • If you narrow a tube and try to keep flow constant you will have to exert a larger pressure to pump the same amount of fluid through the tube • If the pressures at the beginning and the end of the tube are the same there will be no flow no matter how great the pressure Is there flow in this tube? Answer: FLOW=0 P=100 mmHg Which flow is greater? P=100 mmHg Answer: A=B P=200 mmHg Flow A P=100 mmHg P=100 mmHg Flow B P=0 mmHg ∆P=FLOW X RESISTANCE RESISTANCE= ∆P/FLOW ∆P=FLOW X RESISTANCE RESISTANCE= ∆P/FLOW Series Circuit P=0 mmHg P=100 mmHg R1 R2 R3 R4 Series Circuit 120 Pressure (mmHg) 100 80 60 40 20 0 R1 R2 R3 Rt=R1+R2+R3+R4 R4 Parallel Circuit R1 P=100 mmHg R2 R3 R4 P=0 mmHg Pressure R=100 Q=1 R=25 Q=4 R=5 Q=20 Comparison of series and parallel circuits • In a series circuit the largest resistor is the major determinant of total resistance • In a parallel circuit the lowest resistor is the major determinant of total resistance Berne and Levy 2005 Resistances • • • • • Large arteries=1 Arterioles=14 Capillaries=4 Veins=1 Total resistance=∑Ri=20 Control of tissue blood flow • Intrinsic • Extrinsic BLOOD FLOW Rate of metabolism Extrinsic Control • Autonomic Nervous system • Circulating hormones Autonomic Nervous System pregang lionic cholinergic Sympathetic thoracico-lumbar postganglionic adrenergic Paravertebral Exception: sweat glands Parasympathetic cranial & sacral postganglionic cholinergic preganglionic cholinergic at organ Autonomic Nervous System Nerves Neurotransmitter Distribution Effect SNS Cervical Thoracic Pregang: ACH Postgang: NE Heart, Arteries & Most veins β1(↑HR) α1 β2 PNS Vagus and lumbar Pregang: ACH Post gang ACH Heart Vessels of Genitalia & colon ↓HR Epinephrine • Source: Adrenal medulla • Increase heart rate and contractility (β1) • low concentrations vasodilation (β2) • high concentrations – vasoconstriction (α1) – decrease venous compliance (α1) Norepinephrine • Source: Adrenal medulla • Increase heart rate and contractility (β1) • Limited effect on β2 • At all concentrations – vasoconstriction (α1) – decrease venous compliance (α1) Control of tissue flow • Intrinsic Control • Extrinsic control • Long term control (vascular remodeling) OBJECTIVES • Overview • Relationship between pressure and flow • Understand the differences between series and parallel circuits • Cardiac output and its distribution • Cardiac function • Control of blood pressure • Review of lab Determinants of Cardiac Output • Heart rate • Stroke volume – Ventricular end-diastolic volume – Contractility – Afterload (aortic pressure) Berne and Levy 2005 Determinants of stroke volume • Volume in heart at end of diastole – Time to fill – Filling pressure – Property of ventricle • Stiffness • Ability to relax after contraction • Ability to eject (systole) – Contractility – After load (arterial pressure) We have two major systems to sense and control arterial pressure Control of pressure • Short term – Arterial barroreceptors • Long term – Renin angiotensin system ( Kidney and volume regulation) Arterial Baroreceptors The heart is under net basal parasympathetic tone 120 110 100 Heart rate (bpm) Propranolol 90 80 Atropine 70 60 50 40 Propranolol Atropine Activation of Barroreceptor reflex In response to an increase in arterial pressure • Withdrawal of sympathetic tone • Activation of parasympathetic tone • Results: – Decrease heart rate and contractility – Arterial vasodilation – Decrease in venous compliance The lab • Chronically catheterized conscious rat – Epinephrine (β1, β2 + α agonist) – Norepinephrine (β1 + α agonist) – Phentolamine (α-receptor antagonist) – Propranolol (β-receptor antagonist)