Cardiovascular
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Transcript Cardiovascular
Chapter 16
The Cardiovascular
System: Blood Vessels
and Circulation
Blood Vessels
• arteries
• carry blood away from ventricles of heart
• arterioles
• receive blood from arteries
• carry blood to capillaries
• capillaries
• sites of exchange of substances between
blood and body cells
• venules
• receive blood from capillaries
• veins
• carry blood toward atria of heart
15-30
Blood Vessels
Three layers (tunica): external, middle, inner
Arteries: thicker
Arterioles:
Elastic: large
smooth muscle helps regulate blood pressure
Sympathetic activity to smooth muscle
vasoconstriction (narrowing)
Decreased sympathetic activity or NONE
causes relaxation (dilation)
Capillaries lack muscle fibers
15-33
Metarteriole
• connects arteriole directly to venule
15-34
Walls of Artery and Vein
15-32
Blood Vessel Structure: Arteries, Veins
Blood Vessel Structure: Arteries, Veins
Capillaries
• smallest diameter blood vessels
• extensions of inner lining of arterioles
• walls are endothelium only
• semipermeable
• sinusoids – leaky capillaries
15-35
Capillary Network
15-36
Regulation of Capillary: Blood Flow
Precapillary sphincters
• may close a capillary
• respond to needs of the cells
• low oxygen and nutrients cause
sphincter to relax
Autoregulation: ability of a
tissue to adjust blood flow into
the area according to demands
15-37
Exchange in the Capillaries
• water and other substances leave capillaries because of net
outward pressure at the capillaries’s arteriolar ends
• water enters capillaries’ at the venular ends because of a net
inward pressure
• substances move in and out along the length of the capillaries
according to their respective concentration gradients
15-38
Capillary Details
Capillary Details
Capillary Exchange
Colloid osmotic pressure (pulls into capillary)
Plasma proteins create this “pulling” pressure
Causes reabsorption of fluid from outside to inside
Excess fluid returned via lymphatic system
Capillary Exchange
Blood Vessel Structure: Veins
Venules
Larger lumen, thinner walls
Valves prevent backflow
Very thin, no valves
Blood enters veins at very low pressure
Inadequate to overcome gravity and return blood
to heart
Venous Valves
15-40
Venous Return: Two Mechanisms
Skeletal muscle contractions
1.
Especially in lower limbs
squeeze veins - emptying them
Because of valves, flow is heart
Systemic venules and veins serve as blood
reservoirs
hold ~ 64% total blood volume
Venous Return: Two Mechanisms
Venous Return: Two Mechanisms
Respiratory pump
2.
Inhalation decreases thoracic pressure
& increases abdominal pressure
blood to heart
Exhalation allows refilling of abdominal veins
Blood Flow Through Vessels
BP highest in aorta: 110/70 mm Hg
Pulse in large arteries
BP declines as flows through more vessels
Arterioles: major drop in BP due to smooth muscle
contraction vasoconstriction
Capillary beds ~ 35-16 mm Hg
16 mm Hg at venules 0 at right atrium
Blood Flow Through Vessels
Factors that regulate blood flow and BP
1. Blood volume and ventricular contraction
cardiac output
Under control of cardiovascular (CV) center (medulla)
2. Vascular resistance:
lumen diameter
vessel length
Smaller lumen (with vasoconstriction) greater
resistance
Greater vessel length (with weight gain) greater
resistance
blood viscosity
Higher viscosity (as with high hematocrit) greater
resistance
Cardiovascular Center
Located in medulla
Helps regulate
Heart rate
Stroke volume
Blood pressure
Blood flow to specific tissues
Mechanisms
By neural mechanisms
By hormonal mechanisms
Input to Cardiovascular Center (Medulla)
Input from different parts of brain
Cerebral cortex: thoughts, decisions
Limbic system: emotions
Hypothalamus: changes in temperature or blood
volume blood flow adjusted accordingly
Input from sensory receptors and nerves
Proprioceptors, baroreceptors, chemoreceptors
Input to Cardiovascular Center (Medulla)
Proprioceptors:
Baroreceptors in aorta and carotid: if BP
Cause heart rate as exercise begins
cardiac output (CO) BP
sympathetic stimulation CO BP
parasympathetic CO BP
Chemoreceptors in aorta and carotid bodies
If low O2, high CO2, or high H+ (acidity)
resistance by vasoconstriction BP
Input to Cardiovascular Center (Medulla)
Output to Cardiovascular Effectors
ANS nerves to heart
Sympathetic HR and force of contraction
cardiac output (CO) BP
Parasympathetic HR CO BP
Vasomotor (sympathetic nerves)
To arterioles contract smooth muscle
vasomotor tone vascular resistance BP
To veins contract smooth muscle move blood
to heart BP
Hormone Regulation of Blood Flow + BP
Renin-angiotensin aldosterone (RAA) system
Epinephrine + norepinephrine CO BP
ADH = vasopressin
Angiotensin II vasoconstriction BP
aldosterone retain Na++ water BP
vasoconstriction BP
Thirst + water retention in kidney BP
ANP from cells in atria
Vasodilation, loss of Na+ water in urine BP
Hormone Regulation of Blood Flow + BP
Arterial Blood Pressure
Blood Pressure – force the blood exerts against the
inner walls of the blood vessels
• rises when ventricles contract
• falls when ventricles relax
• systolic pressure – maximum pressure
• diastolic pressure – minimum pressure
15-42
Checking Circulation: Pulse
Pulse in arteries = heart rate (HR)
Press artery against bone or muscle.
Radial artery (thumb side of wrist)
Carotid artery (neck)
Brachial artery (arm)
Tachycardia: rapid resting HR (>100 bpm)
Bradycardia= slow resting HR (<50 bpm)
Pulse
15-43
Central Venous Pressure
• pressure in the right atrium
• weakly beating heart increases central venous
pressure
• increase in central venous pressure causes blood to
back up into peripheral vein
15-49
Blood Pressure
Device used: sphygmomanometer
Inflate cuff to raise pressure > systolic BP
First sound indicates systolic BP
Lower pressure further until sound become
faint
Briefly stop blood flow there
Lower pressure in cuff until flow just starts
Usually on brachial artery
Diastolic BP
Normal BP values <120 mm Hg for systolic
and < 80 mm Hg for diastolic
Circulatory Routes
Two main routes: systemic + pulmonary
Systemic circulation
Oxygenated blood travels from heart throughout
body, deoxygenating as it goes
All systemic arteries branch from aorta
All systemic veins empty into superior vena cava,
inferior vena cava, or the coronary sinus
Circulatory
Routes
Circulatory
Routes:
Aorta
Circulatory
Routes: Aorta
Circulatory Routes: Aorta
Circulatory Routes: Aorta
Circulatory
Routes: Pelvis,
Lower Limb
Circulatory
Routes:
Principle
Veins
Circulatory Routes: Principle Veins of
the Hands and Neck
Circulatory Routes: Principle Veins of
the Right Upper Limb
Circulatory
Routes:
Principle Veins
of the Pelvis
and Lower
Limbs
Pulmonary Circulation
Carries blood from right side of heart to lungs
to get O2 and eliminate CO2
Right ventricle (RV) pulmonary trunk R + L
pulmonary arteries both lungs
Carry “blue blood” low O2 in and high in CO2
Pulmonary capillaries: gas exchange
R and L pulmonary veins L atrium
Carry “red blood” (high in O2 in and low in CO2)
Pulmonary Circuit
15-50
Blood Flow Through Alveoli
• cells of alveolar wall are tightly joined together
• the high osmotic pressure of the interstitial fluid draws water
out of them
15-51
Cerebral Arterial Circle
• Circle of Willis
• formed by anterior and posterior cerebral arteries, which join
the internal carotid arteries
15-58
Hepatic Portal Circulation
Portal vein: transports blood from one organ’s
capillary bed to another
GI organs
Splenic and superior mesenteric veins
Hepatic portal vein (“blue blood”)
Sinusoids (“leaky capillaries” in liver)
Mixes “blue blood” with “red blood”
Hepatic vein inferior vena cava (IVC)
Hepatic Portal Circulation
Hepatic Portal Vein
15-68
Hepatic Portal Circulation
Fetal Circulation
Specialized for exchange of materials with
maternal blood/bypass lungs
Exchange in placenta umbilical vein
ductus venosus (bypasses liver)
inferior vena cava R atrium (mixes with
deoxygenated blood from lower body)
foramen ovale L atrium
Or R Ventricle pulmonary trunk
ductus arteriosus aorta internal iliac
arteries umbilical arteries placenta
Fetal
Circulation
Changes at Birth
Umbilical arteries medial umbilical
ligaments
Umbilical vein ligamentum teres
Ductus venosus ligamentum venosum
Placenta expelled after
Foramen ovalis closes fossa ovale
Ductus arteriosus ligamentum arteriosum
Aging
Stiffening of aorta
Loss of cardiac muscle strength
Reduced CO & increased systolic pressure
Higher risk for
Coronary artery disease (CAD)
Congestive heart failure (CHF)
Atherosclerosis