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Circulation
Blood flow, blood pressure, and
resistance
 Blood flow is the actual volume of blood
 flowing through a vessel, and organ, or the
 entire circulation in a given period of time.
 Blood pressure is the force per unit area
 exerted on the wall of a blood vessel by its
 contained blood.
Resistance is opposition to flow and is a
measure of the amount of friction blood
encounters as its passes through the vessels.
Peripheral resistance is resistance
encountered in the peripheral circulation.
Blood viscosity is the internal resistance to
flow and is related to the thickness of a
fluid.
The longer the total vessel length, the
greater the resistance encountered.
The smaller the vessel diameter, the greater
the resistance encountered.
Arterial blood pressure
 Systolic pressure is the pressure exerted by
 ventricular contraction, and is measured in
 the aortic arch at about 120mm Hg.
 Diastolic pressure is the pressure exerted by
 the arteries when the ventricles are in
 diastole.
Pulse pressure is the difference between
systolic and diastolic pressure.
Mean arterial pressure (MAP) is responsible
for actually propelling the blood to the
tissues: = diastolic + pulse pressure/3.
Venous blood pressure
 The respiratory pump is a lessening of
 pressure created by pressure changes
 occurring the in the body cavity during
 breathing.
 The muscular pump is pressure created by
 the contraction of skeletal muscles.
Neural controls
 The neural center that oversees changes in
 the diameter of blood vessels is the
 vasomotor center, which is located in the
 medulla.
The vasomotor center transmits impulses in
a fairly steady stream along sympathetic
efferents called vasomotor fibers.
Vasomotor tone is a state of moderate
constriction of arterioles as a result of
inervation by vasomotor fibers.
The carotid sinus reflex protects the blood
supply to the brain due to acute changes in
blood pressure.
The aortic reflex maintains adequate blood
pressure in the systemic circuit as a whole.
Chemical controls
 Adrenal medulla hormones enhance the
 sympathetic response, either by increasing
 cardiac output (epinephrine), or by
 vasoconstriction (NE).
 Atrial natriuretic peptide causes blood
 volume and blood pressure to decline by
 promoting excretion of sodium and water
 by the kidneys.
Antidiuretic hormone stimulates the kidneys
to conserve water, and also causes
vasoconstriction in order to increase blood
pressure.
Angiotensin II causes intense
vasoconstriction, and is generated in
response to renin release by the kidneys.
Nitric oxide promotes systemic and
localized vasodilation.
Alcohol causes blood pressure to drop by
inhibiting ADH release.
Renal regulation
 The renin-angiotensin system is an indirect
 renal mechanism used to raise blood
 pressure due to a decline in arterial blood
 pressure.
 Angiotensin II is a vasoconstrictor produced
 by the enzyme renin, which increases renal
 perfusion, and stimulates the adrenal cortex
 to secrete aldosterone.
Monitoring circulatory efficiency
 Vital signs are measurements of pulse and
 blood pressure.
 A pulse is the alternating expansion and
 recoil of elastic arteries during each cardiac
 cycle.
 Pressure points are areas where blood flow
 can be compressed due to trauma, or to take
 a pulse measurement.
Systemic arterial blood pressure is
measured indirectly by the auscultatory
method, which measures blood pressure in
the brachial artery using a
sphygmomanometer.
Alterations in blood pressure
 Hypotension is low blood pressure, and is
 generally considered to be a systolic
 pressure of < 100 mm Hg.
 Hypertension is high blood pressure, and is
 generally considered to be > 140/90.
 Elevated diastolic pressure is more
 significant clinically, because it indicates
 progressive occlusion or arteriosclerosis.
Primary hypertension accounts for 90% of
all cases, and has no underlying cause.
Secondary hypertension accounts for 10%
of cases, and is due to identifiable disorders.
Blood flow through body tissues
 Tissue perfusion is blood flow through the
 body.
 Autoregulation is the automatic adjustment
 of blood flow to each tissue in proportion to
 its requirements at any point in time.
Myogenic responses are stimulation of
vascular smooth muscle due to changes in
arteriolar blood pressure, and keep tissue
perfusion fairly constant.
Reactive hyperemia is the dramatic increase
in blood flow into a tissue that occurs after
the blood supply to an area has been
temporarily blocked.
When blood flow increases to skeletal
muscles in direct proportion to their greater
metabolic activity, it is called active
hyperemia.
Blood flow through capillaries
 Vasomotion is the slow and intermittent
 flow of blood through capillaries, and is due
 to the opening and closing of precapillary
 sphincters.
 Gases, most chemical nutrients, and
 metabolic wastes pass between the blood
 and interstitial fluid by diffusion.
Hydrostatic pressure is the force exerted by
a fluid pressing against a wall.
Capillary hydrostatic pressure tends to force
fluids through the capillary walls.
Interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure is the
pressure acting outside the capillaries,
which opposes blood pressure.
Capillary colloid osmotic pressure is due to
plasma proteins in capillaries, such as
albumin, that draw water into the
capillaries.
The net filtration pressure is a result of all
forces acting at the capillary bed.
NFP = (HPc-HPif) - (OPc-OPif)
Circulatory shock
 Circulatory shock is any condition in which
 blood vessels are inadequately filled and
 blood cannot circulate normally.
Types of circulatory shock
 Hypovolemic shock results from large-scale
 loss of blood, as might follow acute
 hemorrhage.
 Vascular shock is due to a huge drop in
 peripheral resistance due to extreme
 vasodilation.
Cardiogenic shock occurs when the heart is
so inefficient that it cannot sustain adequate
circulation.

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Circulation

  • 2. Blood flow, blood pressure, and resistance Blood flow is the actual volume of blood flowing through a vessel, and organ, or the entire circulation in a given period of time. Blood pressure is the force per unit area exerted on the wall of a blood vessel by its contained blood.
  • 3. Resistance is opposition to flow and is a measure of the amount of friction blood encounters as its passes through the vessels. Peripheral resistance is resistance encountered in the peripheral circulation.
  • 4. Blood viscosity is the internal resistance to flow and is related to the thickness of a fluid. The longer the total vessel length, the greater the resistance encountered. The smaller the vessel diameter, the greater the resistance encountered.
  • 5. Arterial blood pressure Systolic pressure is the pressure exerted by ventricular contraction, and is measured in the aortic arch at about 120mm Hg. Diastolic pressure is the pressure exerted by the arteries when the ventricles are in diastole.
  • 6.
  • 7. Pulse pressure is the difference between systolic and diastolic pressure. Mean arterial pressure (MAP) is responsible for actually propelling the blood to the tissues: = diastolic + pulse pressure/3.
  • 8. Venous blood pressure The respiratory pump is a lessening of pressure created by pressure changes occurring the in the body cavity during breathing. The muscular pump is pressure created by the contraction of skeletal muscles.
  • 9.
  • 10.
  • 11. Neural controls The neural center that oversees changes in the diameter of blood vessels is the vasomotor center, which is located in the medulla.
  • 12. The vasomotor center transmits impulses in a fairly steady stream along sympathetic efferents called vasomotor fibers. Vasomotor tone is a state of moderate constriction of arterioles as a result of inervation by vasomotor fibers.
  • 13.
  • 14. The carotid sinus reflex protects the blood supply to the brain due to acute changes in blood pressure. The aortic reflex maintains adequate blood pressure in the systemic circuit as a whole.
  • 15. Chemical controls Adrenal medulla hormones enhance the sympathetic response, either by increasing cardiac output (epinephrine), or by vasoconstriction (NE). Atrial natriuretic peptide causes blood volume and blood pressure to decline by promoting excretion of sodium and water by the kidneys.
  • 16. Antidiuretic hormone stimulates the kidneys to conserve water, and also causes vasoconstriction in order to increase blood pressure. Angiotensin II causes intense vasoconstriction, and is generated in response to renin release by the kidneys.
  • 17. Nitric oxide promotes systemic and localized vasodilation. Alcohol causes blood pressure to drop by inhibiting ADH release.
  • 18.
  • 19.
  • 20. Renal regulation The renin-angiotensin system is an indirect renal mechanism used to raise blood pressure due to a decline in arterial blood pressure. Angiotensin II is a vasoconstrictor produced by the enzyme renin, which increases renal perfusion, and stimulates the adrenal cortex to secrete aldosterone.
  • 21. Monitoring circulatory efficiency Vital signs are measurements of pulse and blood pressure. A pulse is the alternating expansion and recoil of elastic arteries during each cardiac cycle. Pressure points are areas where blood flow can be compressed due to trauma, or to take a pulse measurement.
  • 22.
  • 23. Systemic arterial blood pressure is measured indirectly by the auscultatory method, which measures blood pressure in the brachial artery using a sphygmomanometer.
  • 24. Alterations in blood pressure Hypotension is low blood pressure, and is generally considered to be a systolic pressure of < 100 mm Hg. Hypertension is high blood pressure, and is generally considered to be > 140/90. Elevated diastolic pressure is more significant clinically, because it indicates progressive occlusion or arteriosclerosis.
  • 25. Primary hypertension accounts for 90% of all cases, and has no underlying cause. Secondary hypertension accounts for 10% of cases, and is due to identifiable disorders.
  • 26. Blood flow through body tissues Tissue perfusion is blood flow through the body. Autoregulation is the automatic adjustment of blood flow to each tissue in proportion to its requirements at any point in time.
  • 27.
  • 28.
  • 29. Myogenic responses are stimulation of vascular smooth muscle due to changes in arteriolar blood pressure, and keep tissue perfusion fairly constant. Reactive hyperemia is the dramatic increase in blood flow into a tissue that occurs after the blood supply to an area has been temporarily blocked.
  • 30. When blood flow increases to skeletal muscles in direct proportion to their greater metabolic activity, it is called active hyperemia.
  • 31. Blood flow through capillaries Vasomotion is the slow and intermittent flow of blood through capillaries, and is due to the opening and closing of precapillary sphincters. Gases, most chemical nutrients, and metabolic wastes pass between the blood and interstitial fluid by diffusion.
  • 32.
  • 33.
  • 34. Hydrostatic pressure is the force exerted by a fluid pressing against a wall. Capillary hydrostatic pressure tends to force fluids through the capillary walls. Interstitial fluid hydrostatic pressure is the pressure acting outside the capillaries, which opposes blood pressure.
  • 35. Capillary colloid osmotic pressure is due to plasma proteins in capillaries, such as albumin, that draw water into the capillaries. The net filtration pressure is a result of all forces acting at the capillary bed. NFP = (HPc-HPif) - (OPc-OPif)
  • 36.
  • 37. Circulatory shock Circulatory shock is any condition in which blood vessels are inadequately filled and blood cannot circulate normally.
  • 38. Types of circulatory shock Hypovolemic shock results from large-scale loss of blood, as might follow acute hemorrhage. Vascular shock is due to a huge drop in peripheral resistance due to extreme vasodilation.
  • 39. Cardiogenic shock occurs when the heart is so inefficient that it cannot sustain adequate circulation.