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PBM -1.2
The second PBM 1 test
126
Biology
Graduate
01/15/2014

Additional Biology Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term

 

 

 

Roles of Circulatory System

Definition
  • primary roles: distribution of dissolved gases, distribution of nutrient molecules
  • secondary roles: fast chemical signaling(hormones and neurotransmitters), dissipation of heat for core to surface, mediation of inflammatory and host defense
Term

 

 

 

Disease Caused by failure of

Circulatory System

Definition
  • Congestive heart failure: heart as a pump
  • thrombosis and embolism: blood as effective liquid organ
  • Hemorrhage: vasculature as competent container
  • Atherosclerosis: efficient distribution system
Term

 

 

 

Cross Sectional Area of Vessels

Definition
  • capillaries have the highest at 2500cm
  • Aorta is the smallest with 2.5cm2
  • second largest is venules
  • Aorta has the highest velocity and capillaries the lowest(more exchange)
  • Bloow flow=XSA x velocity
  • XSA= cross sectional area
Term

 

 

 

Three Kinds of Pressure Differences,

and their axes, in a blood vessel

Definition
  • drving pressure: along the axis-between arterial and venous ends of systemic circulation
  • transmural pressure: difference btw inside(intravascular) the vessels and just outside the vessel(tissue)
  • hydrostatic pressure: difference in height
  • fig 17.4 in book
  • P=F/A
Term

 

 

 

Viscosity of Blood

Definition
  • high in center but low near the walls
  • increasing hematocrit exponentially increases viscosity
  • normal hemocrit is around 45 with a viscosity of around 4
  • hemocrit is cells in the blood
Term

 

 

 

Laminar Vs Turbulent Flow

Definition
  • flow is laminar and increases as long as there is a pressure difference and no resistance
  • however after a critical velocity, resistance increases and flow becomes turbulent
  • Reynolds number(dimensionless quantity) determines the turbulent flow (exceeds 2000)
  • examples branching points in aorta and stenosis
Term

 

 

 

Pressure Oscicilltations of blood flow

Definition
  • Mean Arterial Pressure= Diastolic pressure + 1/3 of systolic pressure
  • systolic pressure is high number and diastolic the lower one
Term

 

 

 

Compliance

Definition
  • if you change the volume the pressure changes
  • how much you can stretch as well as hold the volume
  • Compliance = ^V/^P
  • veins have high compliance (hold lots of volume with out change in pressure
  • arteries have low compliance(high pressure for not as much volume)
  • decreases with age
Term

 

 

 

Anatomy and Function of vasculature

Definition
  • aorta-billions of capillaries-single vena cava
  • arteries: distribution system
  • microcirculation: dffusion and filtration system
  • vein: collection system 
Term

 

 

 

Keyparameters of Circulation System

Definition
  • number of vessels(1 arota to 4x10^10 cappilaries)
  • radius of an individual vessel: declines
  • cross sectional area
  • mean linear velocity: decreases
  • single vessle flow: decreases
  • relative blood volume: systemic>pulmonary>heart
  • circulation time: 1 min for complete journey, 10 sec for coronary circ
  • presure profiles: higher in systemic then pulmonary
  • elastic properties
Term

 

 

Blood Vessel

Resistors and Capacitors 

Definition
  • compliance
  • resistors show a large increase in pressure with an increase in volume(more linear) (aorta)
  • capacitors show a large increase in volume with a small increase in pressure (vena cava)
Term

 

 

 

 

Wall Tension

Definition
  • opposes transmural pressure
  • T=^P x r
  • wall tension increases with increase in radius in arteries but not in veins
  • collogen fibers react more to a change in radius where as elastic fibers barely gain tension with a large increase in radius(intact artery btw)
  • smooth muscle contraction reduces radius and wall tension
Term

 

 

 

Microcirculature

Definition
  • microcirculation serves both nutritional and non-nutritional role
  • the two sides of blood vessels and capilaries in btw
  • all contains endothelium
  • metarteriold: shortcut in system w/ discont VSMC
  • capillaries contain a single layer of ECs surround by BM
  • precapillary sphincters: transition btw a cap. and arteriole or metarteriole
  • capillaries fall into three groups based on degree of leakiness
Term

 

 

 

Capillary Types

Definition
  • continuous: most common with interendothelial junctions(10-15 nm wide)
  • fernestrated: endothelial cells are thin and pnctured with fenestrations(mem.-lined, cylindrical conduits), most often surrounding epithelia(small intestine and renal glomeruli)
  • discontinuous: with large gap and found in sinusoids(open por capillary, lack of diaphragm and few tigh jnx). large intercellular clefts increase permiability. found in liver
Term

 

 

 

Capillary Exchange of Solutes

Definition
  • lipid-soluble subs like O2 and C02 readily exchange across capillary ECs by diffusion
  • water and electrolytes move across the endothellium primarly by bulk flow via interendothelial clefts(pores)
  • vesicular transport mech. move large molecules across the endothelium (transcytosis)
  • active transport mech. move ions and other small molecules across the endothelium
Term

 

 

 

Krogh Model

**

Definition
  • Explains PO2 w/in the capillary and PO2 shape of profiles w/in the vessel and tissue
  • arterial blood has high O2 level
  • PO2 profile of the capillary depend on: 
  • Free O2 in the arteriolar blood (dissolved in plasma) and O2 content of the blood (<2% of total O2 is dissolved)
  • capillary blood flow (F)
  • radial diffusion coefficient (Dr)
  • capillary radius (rc) and tissue cyclinder r. (rt)(tissue cylinder radius is from capillary to capillary)
  • O2 consumption by surrounding tissue (Qo2)
  • axial distance (X) along the capillary
Term

 

 

 

O2 Extraction Ratio

**

Definition
  • depends on blood flow and metabolic demand
  • decreases as flow increases
  • increases as O2 consumption increases
  • 2 equations 
Term

 

 

 

Excercise Effect On Capillaries

Definition
  • O2 consumption, vasodilation, blood flow, density of perfused capillaries and PO2(tissue) all go up
  • tissue radius of Krogh cylinder, diffusion distance both go down
  • PO2 in the capillary lumen during excercise: will fall less sharply when increase F, but PO2 actually fall deeply due to increase oxygen consumption, Qo2: oxygen consumption overides flow here
Term

 

 

 

Diffusion of water soluble solute

across a capillary wall

Definition
  • controlled by mechanism of bulk flow with diffusion
  • hydrophillic solutes smaller than albumin can transverse the capillary wall thru paracellular route such as clets, interendothelial junctions, gaps or fenestrae
  • due to the property of lipid-insoluble, small polar molecules have a relatively low permeability, can only diffuse through water-filled pore
Term

 

 

 

Permiability Coefficient

Definition
  • used when calculating flux of a small water-soluble solute
  • Px=Dx/a
  • the permibility coefficent is a parameter combined D(diffusion coefficient, cm2/s) and wall thickness, a(cm)
  • thus  Px expresses the ease with which the solute crosses a capillary by diffusion
  • also affected by leakiness
Term

 

 

 

Estimation of Capillary Permeability

Definition
  • estimated by whole-organ extraction ration
  • Ex = (Xa-Xv)/Xa :just like extraction ratio
  • Ex depends on total organ blood flow(F) and (Px)S
  • Ex = 1- e-(PxS/F)
Term

 

 

 

Small-Pore Effect

Definition
  • small pores- 3nm of radius
  • the permability coefficient of small polar molecules falls as molecular radius rises
  • for lipid-soluble subs like CO2 and O2, which can diffuse thru the entire capillary cell, the permeability is much larger
  • small polar molecules can diffuse only by paracellular path via inter-endothelial cleft, or other water filled pathways, which constitute only a fraction of total capillary area
Term

 

 

 

Large-Pore effect

(transcytosis)

Definition
  • caveoli (membrane invagination) are predominantly responsible for translocation of macromolecules (caveoli contain protein caveolin)
  • process of vesicular transport governs transcytosis of macromolecules
  • apparent permeability of typical capill. macromol. falls of steeply w/ inc. in molecular radius, feature of sieving
Term

 

 

 

Transcellular vs Paracellular 

Capillary Exchange of Water

Definition
  • trnacellulary pathway involves AQP1 (aquaporin, a water channel in EC)
  • Paracellular pathway involves interendothelial clefts, fenestrae or gaps
Term

 

 

 

Convection

Definition
  • main mechanism for the transfer of fluid across the capillary membrane 
  • two driving forces for convection of fluid or bulk water mvt: transcapillary hydrostatic pressure difference and effective osmotic pressure difference
  • hydrostatic pressure is Capillary pressure vs Interstitial fluid pressure
  • osmotic pressure is the amounts of protein in the capillary and in the interstitial fluid 
Term

 

 

 

NDF

Definition
  • net filtration pressure
  • (Pc-Pif) - σ(∏c-∏if)
  • NDF > 0, filtration (NDF > 0 at arterial end)
  • NDF<0, reabsorption ( ex is at venous end)
  • NDF= 0 no net fluid movements
  • σ refelcts the permeability of capillary to the proteins responsible for generatic osmotic pressure
Term

 

 

 

Beta-Adrenergic Receptors

Definition
  • members of a superfamily of GPCRs
  • can lead to cAMP or DAG, IPsecondary messangers
  • seven transmembrane domains
  • alpha, beta, and gamma gprotein subunits
  • β1 - heart, β2 - vascular, pulmonary, GI smooth muscle, β3 -adipose tissue
Term

 

 

 

Pharmacological Profile

of Beta 1 and 2 receptors

Definition
  • NE and Epi have the same effect on Beta 1 receptors (heart)
  • Beta 2 receptors do relaxation of smooth muscles, epinephrine has a greater effect, NE needs a higher concentration to have the same effect
  • conc of NE usually does not reach level needed to have a beta 2 response
Term

 

 

 

β1 Adrenergic Receptor Signaling

Definition
  • activates Gs actives AC to increase cAMP levels
  • cAMP activates PKA and If channel(HCN channel, SA node)
  • PKA then targets L-type calcium channel, ryanodine receptor, troponin I, phospholamban in ventricular muscle
  • PKA can also targe If channel
Term

 

 

 

Phospholamban

Definition
  • inhibits SERCA normally
  • when PKA phosphoralates it, phospholamban becomes inhibited
  • this allows SERCA to operate, increasing the rate of relaxation in the cell
  • increases ionotrophy because with next contraction, theres more calcium in the SR
Term

 

 

 

Beta2 adenergic receptor signaling

Definition
  • activation causes an increase in cAMP levels in the vascular smooth muscle
  • this causes a reduction in MLCK activity 
  • leads to a relaxation of the smooth muscle
Term

 

 

 

Drugs that target β-ARs

Definition
  • β-ARs agonists are epinephrine, norepinephrine, dopamine, isoproterenol, dobutamine(β1) and albuterol (β2)
  • β-AR Antagonists are propranolol and metoprolol(β1)
Term

 

 

 

Effects of β-AR blockade

Definition
  • heart: decrease contractility, and heart rate
Term

 

 

 

Therapeutic Uses: β-AR Agonists

Definition
  • heart failure
  • cardiac arrest
  • asthma
  • anaphylaxis
Term

 

 

 

Therapeutic Uses: β-AR antagonists

Definition
  • post-MI
  • angina
  • hypertension
  • heart failure
  • arrhythmias
Term

 

 

 

Ca Channel Blockers-Classes

Definition
  • dihydropyridines: Nifedipine
  • Non-Dihydropyridines: Verapamil, diltiazem
  • reduce contraction, heart rate, and something
  • in smooth muscle they relax
  • Heart: Verapamil>diltiazem>dihyrdopyridines
  • Arteriolar Smoot M.:dihydropyridines> diltiazem> verapamil
Term

 

 

 

Therapeutic Uses: Ca Channel Blockers

Definition
  • hypertension, angina, arrhythmias
  • CCBs can reduce cardiac contractility, heart rate, and conduction
  • arteriodilation
Term

 

 

 

Vasoconstrictor area of

Vasomotor Center

Definition
  • located bilaterally in anterolateral portions of upper medulla; 
  • fibers from these neurons are disrtibuted to all levels of spinal cord, excite preganglionic vasoconstrictor neurons of sympathetic nervous system
Term

 

 

 

Vasodilator Area of 

Vasomotor Center

Definition
  • located bilaterally in anterolateral portions of lower medulla
  • fibers from these neurons project upwards to vasoconstrictor area 
  • they inhibit vasoconstrictor activity resulting in vasodilation
Term

 

 

 

Sensory Area of 

Vasomotor Center

Definition
  • located bilaterally in posterolateral portions of medulla and lower pons
  • neurons receive sensory nerve signals through vagus and glossopharyngeal nerves,
  •  output signals from this area control activities of vasoconstrictor and vasodialator areas
Term

 

 

 

Vascular tone

Definition
  • contractive state of vessel or vascular region
  • arteriolar tone: regulated by basal tone, local metabolic vasodialator factors, symp vasoconstrictor nerves(viaα1)
  • venous tone: controlled by symp vasoconstrictor nerves, internal pressure, external compression
  • basal arteriolar tone contributes to total peripheral resistance and arterial BP in resting ind
  • flow in brain, cardiac and skeletal muscle under local metabolic control
  • flow in kidney, skin, splanchnic regulated by symp nerve 
Term

 

 

 

Sympathetic vasoconstrictor tone

Definition
  • vasoconstrictor area continuously transmits signals to sympathetic vasoconstrictor nerve fibers, cause slow firing of these fibers -> continual firing is called symp vasoconstrictor tone
  • causes continuous partial constriction of blood vessels, called vasomotor tone
Term

 

 

 

Reflex Mech. for

controling arterial pressure

Definition
  • baroreceptors
  • chemoreceptors
  • low-pressure receptors 
Term

 

 

 

Baroreceptor reflex

Definition
  • negative feedback reflex mechanism-primary purpose to stabilize minute by minute variations in arterial pressure
  • initiated by stretch receptors called baroreceptors or pressoreceptors; located at specific points in walls of systemic arteries
  • respond rapidly to changes in arterial pressure; geater response to rapidly changing pressure
  • 2 main types: carotid baroreceptors (use herring nerve) and aortic baroreceptors
Term

 

 

 

Baroreceptors during

changes in body posture

Definition
  • upon standing, fall in arterial pressure in head and upper part of body leads to loss of consciousness
  • falling pressure at baroreceptors initiates an immediate reflex resulting in strong sympathetic dischange -> increases arterial pressure back to normal
Term

 

 

 

Chemoreceptors

Definition
  • initiated by chemosensitive cells that are sensitive to oxygen lack and excess of CO2 and Hion concentration
  • located in chemoreceptor organs: 2 carotid bodies and 1-3 aortic bodies (adjacent to aorta)
  • excite nerve fibers passing through herings and vagus nerves into vasomotor center of brain stem
  • only functional when presssure drops below 80mm Hg
  • each carotid/aortic body has an abundant supply 
  • can both speed up and slow down heart depending on O2 levels and other conditions
Term

 

 

 

Atrial and Pulmonary Artery Reflexes

Definition
  • stretch receptors called low-pressure receptors
  • located in walls of atria and pulmonary arteries
  • similar to baroreceptors, usually work in parallel to baroreceptors
  • regulate differences in arterial pressure due to changes in blood volume
  • atrial stretch causes reflex dilation of afferent renal arterioles, increasing glomerular filtration 
  • also lowers secretion of ADH, decreasing water reabsorbtion
  • net result: increase in fluid loss by kdineys, decreases blood volume back to normal
Term

 

 

 

The Bainbridge Reflex

Definition
  • nervous reflex of atria that controls heart rate
  • initiated by stretch receptors of atria in response to increased blood volume
  • acts as counterbalance to baroreceptor reflex in control of heart rate
  • prevents damming of blood in veins, atria and pulmonary circ
  • increases heart rate and strenght of heart contraction
Term

 

 

 

CNS Ischemic Response

Definition
  • arterial pressure elevation in response to cerebral ischemia (severely reduced blood flow to vasomotor center in lower brain stem)
  • most powerful activator of sympathetic vasoconstrictor system
  • excites vasoconstrictor and cardioaccelerator neurons in vasomotor center( causes drastic elevation)
  • can lead to almost complete occlusion of peripheral vessels
  • works only when MAP falls to below 60 mm Hg
Term

 

 

 

Cushing Reflex

Definition
  • specific type of CNS ischemic response resulting from increased pressure of CSF around brain 
  • cushing reaction protects brian from elevated CSF pressure
  • cushing triad
  • widening pulse pressure (with elevated systolic and decrease/normal diastolic BP)
  • bradycardia (slower heart rate)
  • irregular respiration
Term

 

 

 

Abdominal Compression Reflex

Definition
  • when baroreceptor or chemoreceptor reflex is initiated 
  • transmission of nerve signals to skeletal muscles
  • compresses abdominal venous reservoirs, facilitating translocation of blood out of abdominal vascular reservoir to heart
  • increases cardiac output and arterial pressure
Term

 

 

 

Skeletal muscle contraction

during excersise

Definition
  • compression of blood vessels translocates blood from peripheral vessels to heart resulting in increased cardiac output and increased arterial pressure
Term

 

 

 

Inspiration and Arterial Pressure

Definition
  • insipiration causes negative pressure within thoracic cavity, leading to expansion of blood vessels in chest
  • leads to decrease in quantity of blood returning to left side of heart, momentary decrease in cardiac output and decrease in arterial pressure
  • pressure changes in thoracic vessels following respiration excite vascular and atrial stretch receptors
  • slight increase in arterial pressure during early part of expiration
Term

 

 

 

determinants of myocardial oxygen 

demand

Definition
  • heart rate
  • after load or systemic vascular resistance
  • myocardial wall stress (measured by preload)
  • myocardial contractility
  • coronary flow is 225ml/min at rest but can increase fourfold to sevenfold with strenuous exercise
Term

 

 

 

Atherosclerosis

Definition
  • a complex arterial disease in which cholesterol deposition, extracellular matrix, and thrombus formation play major roles
  • a diffuse condition of ahterothrombosis invloving the heart(coronary arteries), brain(carotid, vertebral, cerebral arteries), aorta and peripheral arteries
Term

 

 

 

σ coefficient

Definition
  • the observed osmotic pressure is less then the theoretical one
  • this coefficient helps rectify it
  • if the capilary is impermeable to the protein then the coefficeint is 1
  • if it is freely permeable then it is 0
  • continuous cap. have one greater then 0.9 and discontinuous or fernestered is close to 0
Term

 

 

 

Capillary Pressure

Definition
  • determined by Pressure on artery and venule side, as well as pre and post resistance
  • effect of elevations in venous pressure are much greater due to postcapillary resistance being much lower
  • because Ra is higher, change in Pa is poorly transmitted downstream to the capillary
  • precapillary upstream resistance exceeds the postcapillary downstream (Rv/Ra)=0.3
Term

 

 

 

Other Factors to affect Pc

Definition
  • high Pc needed for glomerular capillary for ultrafiltration
  • high Pc is needed to keep the capillary patent in the face
  • Low Pc pulmonary capillaries to minimize ultrafiltration and avoid edema
  • Pc varies considerably from moment to moment
  • gravity: a capillary bed below the level of the heart has a high Pc than a capillary bed at the level of the heart
Term

 

 

 

Interstitial Fluid Pressure(Pif)

Definition
  • slightly negative, except in encapsulated organ
  • determined by interstitual fluid volume, and compliance of the tissue
  • has slightly negative because of pumping into lympatic system
  • Pif is sensitive to addition of fluid to interstitial compartment. adding more fluid disrupts the solid phase of collagen fibers, making interstitial compartment behaves like a high compliance system, so large volume can accumulate, and resulting in edema in loose tissue
Term

 

 

 

Interstitial Fluid Colloid Osmotic Pressure

Definition
  • lowest value is at the arteriolar end due to flitration(gain of protein-free fluid from the capillary)
  • the highest value is near the venular end due to reabsorption(loss of protein-free fluid from IF)
Term

 

 

 

Interstitial Edema and Edema Formation

Definition
  • edema is characterized by an excess of salt and water in the extracellular space, or the fluid volume within interstitial compartment increase because filtration>reabsorption + lymph 
  • increase capilary hydrostatic presure (heart failure or venous obstruction) 
  • decreased plasma colloid osmotic forces
  • increase capilary permeability
  • lymphatic obstruction
Term

 

 

 

Local Control Mech

Microcirculation

Definition
  • myogenic regulation refers an intrinsic mode of control of activity
  • chemical factors: interstitial PO2, pH, ect
  • in the case of local control, increased interstitial metabolism vasodilates vessels 
  • blood flow activates local feed back system, inducing vasomotion
Term

 

 

 

Vasoactive Compounds

Definition
  • endothelium of capilary bed is the source of vasoactive compounds, NO, EDHF and endothelin
Term

 

 

 

Vasodialation in VSMCs

Definition
  • nitric Oxide(NO)(inhibits platelet aggregation, platelet adhesion
  • endothelium-derived hyperpolarizing factor(EDHF)
  • prostacyclin(PGI2): increases cAMP and phosphorylation of MCLK
Term

 

 

 

Vasoconstriction in VSMCs

Definition
  • endothelins(promoted by acute and chronic pathological conditions, including hypoxia (binds to PLC to generate IP3 and raise Ca2+ level
  • thromboxane A2 (TXA2) opens ltype channels
  • EDCF: an endothelium dependent putative factor mediating vasoconstriction. EDCF2 could be superoxide anion radical 
Term

 

 

 

Vascular bed Autoregulation

Definition
  • despite large changes in systemic arterial pressure, vascular beds maintains local blood flow in a narrow range
  • vascular beds behave like a rigid vessel at very low and very high perfusion pressures
  • increase in pressure lead to increase in resistance to keep blood flow within a range
  • contraction of VSMCs are autonomous and independent of neural and endocrine mech
  • both myogenic and chemical factors play an important role in adjusting smooth muscle tone during autoregulation
  • autoregulation is very important for heart, brain and kidney, that is very sensitive to ischemia or hypoxia
Term

 

 

 

Angiogenesis

Definition
  • dissolution of venular basement membrane
  • activation and proliferation of quiescent endothelial cells
  • the new cells, attracted by G.F. migrate to form a tube
  • the budding tubes connect each other, allowing the flow of blood and the development of vascular smooth muscle as the new microvascular network establishes itself
Term

 

 

 

Angiogenesis Promoters

Definition
  • VGEF and FGF are the principle peptides inducing angiogensis
  • VEGF: produced by fibroblasts and cancers:promoted by activated coagulation factor VII
  • FGF mediates many cellular responses during embryonic, fetal, postnatal development 
  • both interact EC specific receptor tyrosine kinase
  • both promot NOS expresion, generating NO promotes proliferation and migration of ECS and differentiation of vascular tubes
  • avastin mAb against VGEF-A, used as anti cancer drug
Term

 

 

 

Coronary Artery Disease

Definition
  • aprox 15 million americans have coronary artery disease
  • remains leading cause of death in US
  • one of every 5 deaths
  • 1.3 million hospitalized
  • 0.81 million acute MI, remainder are unstable
Term

 

 

 

Epicardial Stenosis

Definition
  • blockage
  • blood flow at rest is maintained by compesatory dilation of the coronary bed beyond the stenosis
  • diminished coronary reserve results in an inability to meet oxygen requirements as myocardial demand increases, it creates a supply/demand mismatch
Term

 

 

 

Coronary Artery Disease

(CAD)

Definition
  • various presentations of CAD, including stable angina pectoris or acute chest pain syndromes (unstable angina, acute myocardial infarction) are most commonly related to atheromatous plaque in the coronary arteries
  • progression of coronary atheromata typically results in symptoms when a coronary artery is narrowed-70%
Term

 

 

 

Coronary Heart Disease

Definition
  • cholesterol LDL, HDL, Triglycerides
  • smoking
  • obesity
  • hypertension
  • diabetes
  • genetic predisposition
  • lack of exercise
Term

 

 

 

Positive Stress Test

Definition
  • New ST segment depression
  • inability to exercise more then 2 mins
  • decreased systolic blood pressure with exercise
  • development of heart failure or sustained ventricular arrhythmias
  • prolonged interval after exercise cessation before ST segments changes return to baseline
Term

 

 

 

ABCDE

Definition
  • aspirin
  • beta blockers
  • calcium channel blockers, cholesterol(statins), cigarette smoking
  • diet(low cholesterol, decrease salt intake)
  • excersize
Term

 

 

 

Unstable Angina

Definition
  • plaque is narrowing or intermitantly rupturing and blocking
  • pain longer then 20 mins and brought on at rest or minimal eertion
  • being severe and described as pain
  • occurring with a crescendo pattern
Term

 

 

 

Acute MI

Definition
  • 600,000 persons in US experience an MI each year
  • 320,000 will have a recurrent MI
  • patients with STEMI are 30-40% of cases
  • remainder are NSTEMI
  • average age of first MI 64.5 years in men; 70.4 years in women
  • 156 billion per year
  • in hospital mortality declined from 11.2% in 1990 to 9.4 in 1999 to like 6% now
Term

 

 

 

Plaque Rupture

Definition
  • mild to moderate immature plaques
  • thin fibrous caps
  • lipid rich cores
  • rupture in setting of inflammation
  • sequence of platelet aggregation fibrin deposition and vasoconstriction
Term

 

 

 

Clinical Definition of myocardial infarction

Definition
  • two of the following
  • characteristic symptoms
  • elevation in cardial biomarkers
  • characteristic electrocardiographic (ECG) changes
Term

 

 

 

Retinopathy of Prematurity

Definition
  • retrolental fibroplasia in infans
  •  explosive out growth of retinal vessels in to vitreous humor leading to blindness
  • will be scar formation
  • hypoxia (low 02) -> causes release of H1F1α -> leads to VEGF (vascular endothelial growth factor) ->induction of angiogenesis
  • (tumor uses similar kind of mechanism)
Term

 

 

 

Angiogenesis

Definition
  • formation of new blood vessels from existing vessels
  • mech of long term regulation change in tissue vascularity
  • physiological angiogenesis consists of fetal growth, menstral cycle, and wound healing
  • pathological (excessive) angiogenesis can consist of diseases like diabetic retinopathy and tumor growth
  • pathological(insufficient) heart disease, stroke, ulcers
Term

 

 

 

Membrane Metalo proteinases

Definition
  • degrades basement membrane of vasculature
  • used in begining of angiogenesis
Term

 

 

 

Anti-angiogenic molecules

Definition
  • natural ones are: angiostatin(fragment of plasminogen) and endostatin (fragment of Collagen XVII)
  • drugs are: Avastin (AMD; cancer), and lucentis (AMD)
  • both drugs are antibodies to VEGF
Term

 

 

 

Low Pressure Baroreceptors

Definition
  • B-Fibers: increase in volume, causes these to increase heart rate (thus increasing cardiac output)
  • also A-Fibers
Term

 

 

 

Factors Affecting Cardiac Output

Definition
  • basic level of body metabolism
  • person activity(exercise)
  • age (highest around 10, and goes down hill from here)
  • size of the body
Term

 

 

 

Mean Systemic Filling Pressure

(MSFP)

Definition
  • about 7mm Hg
  • when cardiac output, and thus venous return is zero, right atrial pressure equals this (MSFP)
Term

 

 

 

Effect of Changes 

in Blood Volume on vascular functions

Definition
  • a decrease in blood volume decreases venous return and decreases the RAP, as well as the Man systemic filling pressure (MSFP)
  • increase in blood volume does the opposite
Term

 

 

Effect of Changes 

in arteriolar tone on vascular functions

Definition
  • has same Mean systemic filling pressure regardless of vasoconstriction or vasodialation
  • Vasoconstriction has less venous return and vasodialation more
  • this means maximums higher but x intercept is the same for this graph
Term

 

 

 

Steady State Point

Definition
  • when venous return and cardiac output are both are 5 liters/ min
  • this happens around 2 mm Hg for Right Atrial Pressure
  • if you increase RAP, you increase cardiac output and decrease venous return momentarily 
  • shifting one of the curves does not effect the other (increasing heart rate of venous return) ***
Term

 

 

 

Starlings Law

Definition
  • stroke volume of the heart increases in response to an increase in the volume of blood filling the heart
  • preload or venous return 
  • this is true as long as all other measures remain constant
  • Cardiac output = SV x HR
Term

 

 

 

Blood Flow to cardiac muscles

Definition
  • during exercise: CO is 4-5X in normal people and 6-7X in athletes 
  • rates of blood flow through muscles: rest:3-4ml/min; athlete during exercise: 100-200 ml and endurance:400 ml/min
  • blood flow is low during contraction and high in between(rhythmical)
  • some capil. have little flow at rest but open during exercise, increasing flow 2-3 fold
Term

 

 

 

Local Regulation of blood flow

in skeletal muscles

Definition
  • decreased oxygen leads to production of vasodilators such as adenosine
  • other vasodilatory factors: k+, ATP, lactic acid, CO2
Term

 

 

 

Arterial Pressure and Exercise

Definition
  • increases due to: vasoconstriction of non-muscular arterioles, increased pumping activity, increases systemic filling pressure due to venous constriction
  • important because: increase blood pushing force almost 30 times, increase stretch on walls of vessels and release of vasodilators, increasing local blood pressure(tense situations:MAP to 170mm Hg)
Term

 

 

 

Coronary Circulation

Definition
  • right coronary artery, left coronary artery that branches to left circumflex and left anterior descending branches
  • normal coronary flow is 5% of cardiac output
  • during exercise cardiac output increases 6-7X but blood flow increases only 3-4 fold to the heart
  • coronary blood flow highest at diastole
Term

 

 

 

Heart Ischemia

Definition
  • 70% of energy is consumed from fatty acids at rest
  • during ischemia/anaerobic conditions: energy is derived from glycolysis
  • lactic acid cause of the cardiac pain during cardiac ischemia
  • ATP is the convery of energy during contraction (adenosine is vasodilator)
  • half of adenosine can be lost in 30 min and syn rate is only 2% (one of the major cause of death during myocardial ischemia)
Term

 

 

 

Acute Coronary Occlusion

Definition
  • type of acute coronary ischemia
  • atherosclerosis(plaque build up)
  • plaque formation caused by monocyte catching a damaged endothelium and taking up lipoprotein particles to become macrophage foam cell (adhered on endothelium)
  • plaque can rupture and occlude vessels
  • statins: inh. of HMG-CoA (rate limiting enzyme in cholesterol syn) can inhibit atherosclerosis
  • can cause coronary embolus(thrombosus breaks away and blocks a distal peripheral vessel
  • or secondary thrombus(atherosclerotic plaque could cause spasm in the muscle which may lead to secondary thrombus
Term

 

 

 

Myocardial Infarction

Definition
  • type of acute coronary ischemia
  • infarction:area of muscle with zero or little blood flow and can not sustain cardiac muscle function
  • subendocardial muscle is more prone to infarctiion
  • causes decreased CO, damming of blood in pulmonary vessels, fibrilation and rupture of heart
Term

 

 

 

Cardiac Shock

Definition
  • happens during myocardia infarction
  • failure to pump blood to the peripheral arterial truee due to infarction 
  • leads to cardiac failure and death of the peripheral tissue
Term

 

 

 

Damming of Blood Vessels

Definition
  • cause of death of myocardial infarction
  • when heart is not pumping blood forward
  • causes dammin of blood in atria and the blood vessels of lungs or systemic vessels
  • decreased blood flow to the kidney-less urine secretion-increasing blood volume
  • eventually leading to acute pulmonary edema
Term

 

 

 

Fibrillation of Ventricles

Definition
  • cause of death of myocardial infarction
  • majority of death of MI: 2 dangerous periods: 10 mins and after 1h
  • factors are loss of blood supply depletes K+ in muscle but increase ECF levels, ischemic muscle cause injury current: fail to repolarize making outside of membrane negative, powerful symp reflexes inc irritibiliy, increased dilation of ventricles inc length of the impulse conduction
Term

 

 

 

Rupture of the Infarcted Area

Definition
  • cause of death of Myocardial infarction
  • degeneration of dead muscle fibers makes heart wall thin
  • systolic stretch bulges the ventricle and rupture the infarcted area
  • loss of blood into pericardial space
  • rapid compression of heart by blood collecting in pericardial space(cardiac thamponade)
  • death
Term

 

 

 

Angina Pectoris

Definition
  • can be caused when ischemia increaseds production of lactic acid or histamins, kinins; which stimulate pain nerve endings
  • appearance of cardiac pain whenever the work load on the heart is too great compared to the available coronary blood flow
  • treatment: nitroglycerin, nitrate, vasodilators, sympathetic beta-blockers
Term

 

 

 

Surgical Treatment of

Coronary Artery Disease

Definition
  • aortic-coronary bypass is grafting of subcutaneous vein from arim or leg to the root of the aorta to theside of a peripheral artery beyond the atherosclerotic blockage point(1-5 grafts)
  • coronary angioplasty: procedure to open blocked artery before it became totally occluded (Stint)
Term

 

 

 

Cerebral Blood Flow

Definition
  • supplied by 4 large arteries: 2 carotid, 2 vertebral arteries
  • circle of willis (at base of brain and made from the 4 arteries)
  • normal rate of cerebral blood flow: 50-65ml/100g brain tissue/min (750-900ml/min)
  • brain recieves 15% of resting cardiac output (brain only 2% of body weight)
Term

 

 

 

Regulation of Cerebral Blood flow

Definition
  • CO2 concentration
  • H-ion concentration
  • O2 concentration
  • substances released from astrocytes(specialized non-neuronal cells that couple neuronal activity with local blood flow regulation)
Term

 

 

 

 

Cerebral Blood Flow and CO2 and H+

Definition
  • CO2 + H2O leads to H2CO3 which leads to an increase in H-ions
  • excess Hions (lower brain pH) cause vasodilation of cerebral vessels
  • true for build up of any acedic subs that lead to increase in Hions(lactic acid, pyruvic acid ect)
Term

 

 

 

 

Oxygen Deficiency and 

Cerebral Blood Flow

Definition
  • O2 deficiency causes vasodilation to incease brain blood flow
  • important protective response against diminished cerebral neuronal activity a nd mental derangement
  • decrease in cerebral tissue PO2 below 30 mm Hg (normal 35-40mm Hg) increases blood flow
  • fall in cerebral PO2 below 20 mm Hg can lead to coma
Term

 

 

 

Astrocytes and Blood Flow

Definition
  • astrocytes are star shaped non-neuronal cells that support and protect neurons, provide nutrition
  • provide a potential mechanism for neurovascular communication
  • increased neuronal activity causes vasoactive metabolites to be released from astrocytes (nitric oxide, metab. of arachidonic acid, potassium ions, adenosine)
  • causes increase in cerebral blood flow
Term

 

 

 

Sympathetic NS and Cerebral Blood Flow

Definition
  • cerebral circ system has strong symp innervation
  • increased in mean arterial pressure->symp nervous system constricts brain arteries to prevent high pressure from reaching small brain blood vessels
  • important for preventing vascular hemorrhage in brain
  • important for prevent cerebral stroke
Term

 

 

 

Cerebral Microcirculation

Definition
  • overall metabolic rate of brain grey matter 4x greater then white
  • number of capil. and rate of blood flow-4x greater in grey matter
  • brain capillaries are less leaky than blood capil, due to glial feet -prevent overstretching of capil.
  • walls of small arterioles leading to brain capil are thickened in hypertension- these arterioles rmain constricted to prevent transmission of high pressure to capilaries
Term

 

 

 

Formation of Cerebrospinal Fluid

Definition
  • formed at rate of 500ml/day(3-4X total fluid volume in CSF system)
  • about 2/3 or more orginates as secretion from choroid plexus in the 4 ventricles
  • additional small amounts secreted by ependymal surface of ventricles and arachnoidal membranes
  • also from perivascular spaces in the brain surrounding blood vessels passing through the brain
Term

 

 

 

Absorption of Cerebrospinal Fluid

Definition
  • occurs through arachnoidal villi
  • arachnoidal villi microscopic finger-like inward projections of arachnoidal membrane through walls and into venous sinuses
  • arachnoidal granulations conglomerates of archnoidal vili forming macroscopic structures
  • endothelial cells covering villi allow flow of CSF, dissolve protein molecules and RBC, WBC into venous blood
Term

 

 

 

Cerebral Spinal Fluid Pressure

Definition
  • normal pressure(when lying down) 130mm of water
  • normal healthy person = 65-195 mm of water
  • regulation of CSF mediated via arachnoidal villi
  • arachnoidal villi-function like valves allowing CSF to flow readily into blood of venous sinuses while preventing backflow
  • valve function activated when CSF pressure = 1.5mm Hg greater than blood pressure in venous sinuses
Term

 

 

 

Net Characteristics of CSF

Definition
  • osmotic pressure, aprox. equal to that of plasma 
  • Na-ion concentration, aprox equal to that of plasma
  • Cl-ions, 15% greater than in plasma
  • K-ions, 40% less than plasma
  • glucose, 30% less than plasma
Term

 

 

 

Cerebral Stroke

Definition
  • severe blockage of cerebral blood vessels resulting in severe disturbances in brain function
  • arteriosclerotic plaques in feed arteries to brain are primarly responsible for strokes
  • high BP initiates bursting of blood vessels causing hemorrhage
  • blockage of middle cerebral artery can block nerve conduction in major pathways btw brain and spinal cord(causing snesnory and motor abnormalities)
  • blockage of posterior cerebral artery-infarction of occipital pole resulting in vision loss
Term

 

 

 

Papilledema(edema of optic disc)

Definition
  • high CSF pressure pushes fluid into optic nerve sheath and then along space btw optic nerve fibers to interior of eyeball
  • high pressure decreases outward fluid flow in optic nerves-> leads to accumulation of excess fluid in optic disc at center of retina
  • pressure in optic nerve sheath impedes blood flow in retinal vein-> increase in retinal capillary pressure resulting in retinal edema
  • can be visualized using a microscope
Term

 

 

 

Hydrocephalus

Definition
  • excess water in cranial vault due to impaired CSF absorption
  • communicating hydrocephalus: blockage of fluid flow in subarachnoid spaces around basal regions of brain; blockage of arachnoidal villi
  • non-communicationg hydroceph: fluild flow out of one or more ventricles is blocked(resulting from closure prior to birth or from blockage by brain tumor); increased volume in ventricles flattens brain into a thin shell against skull
  • net result would be increased fluid accum. in  brain and tremendous swellin of head(can lead to brain damage)
Term

 

 

 

Symptoms of Hydrocephalus

Definition
  • sunken eyes
  • seizures
  • headaches 
  • lack of coordination
  • restricted movement and growth
  • urinary incontinence, muscle spasms
  • progressive dementia   
Term

 

 

 

 

Brain Edema

Definition
  • major complication of abnormal cerebral fluid dynamics
  • accumulation of excess fluid in brain compresses blood vessels-> decrease in blood flow and destruction of brain tissue
  • common causes of brain edema: increased capil. pressure or damage to capillary wall causing fluid leak
  • brain concussion resulting in traumatization of brain tissues and capillaries and excessive fluid leak into traumatized tissues
  • fluid taken up by nuronal and nonnuronal cells and swell
Term

 

 

 

Vasogenic Cerebral Edema

Definition
  • due to breakdown of endothelial tight junctions in blood brain barrier
  • increased fluid leak, large number of intravascular proteins leak into brain ECF
Term

 

 

 

Cytotoxic Cerebral Edema

Definition
  • inadequate functioning of Na/K pumps in the glial cells cause increased cellular retention of Na/water
  • this water is retained in nuronal cells and astrocytes
Term

 

 

 

Osmotic Cerebral Edema

Definition
  • occurs when the brain fluid osmolality exceeds that of plasma(eg. when the plasma gets diluted due to excessive water intake)
Term

 

 

 

2 vicious cycles of Brain Edema

Definition
  • compresses vasculature-decrease blood flow and brain ischemia-dilation-furthur increase capil. pressure-more edema fluid-progressive worsening of edema
  • reduced cerebral blood flow-decrease in O2 delivery-increase in cap permeability resulting in more fluid leakage-turns off Na pumps of neuronal cells allowing swelling of these cells
Term

 

 

 

Measures to overcome Brain Edema

Definition
  • IV infusion of concentrated osmotic substance(mannitol sol) - pulls fluid by osmosis from brain tissue and breaks up vicious cycle
  • rapid removal of fluid from lateral ventricles of brain by ventricular needle puncture- to relieve intracerebral pressure
Term

 

 

 

Hypoglycemia

Definition
  • caused by overtreatment of diabetic patients
  • leads to decreased availability of glucose in blood to suppy neurons
  • leads to severe derangement of mental function, coma, mental imbalance, psychotic disturbances
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