important measures of flow pressure, p, – force/area, usually given as mmhg or kpa volume, v or q,...

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Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity, v, given is m * s -1 Volume velocity, , given as liters/sec or minute

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Page 1: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Important Measures of Flow

pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa

volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction

particle velocity, v, given is m * s-1

Volume velocity, , given as liters/sec or minute

Page 2: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Poiseuille’s Equation

Valid for established laminar flow.

Page 3: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Work and Energy

Pressure is a measure of energy per volume

Page 4: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Laminar and Turbulent Flow

In turbulent flow:

Page 5: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Reynold’s Numbers and Turbulent Flow

Page 6: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

(a) high velocity,

(b) large diameter and

(c) low viscosity.

Factors that favor Turbulent flow

Page 7: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Viscosity (η)

Page 8: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Anomalous Viscosity

Page 9: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Particle Velocity in Newtonian Solutions

If we consider tubes in series such that volume velocity is the same in each (steady-state) then:

Page 10: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Pressures and Flow

Page 11: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Blood Vessel Dimensions:Exchange vs. Transport Vessels

Page 12: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Law of Laplace

Blood Vessel Wall Tension and Stress

Page 13: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Tissue Composition of Blood Vessels

Page 14: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

"Blood vessels-en" by Kelvinsong - Own work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Blood_vessels-en.svg#/media/File:Blood_vessels-en.svg

Blood Vessel Structure

Page 15: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Capillaries

"2104 Three Major Capillary Types" by OpenStax College - Anatomy & Physiology, Connexions Web site. http://cnx.org/content/col11496/1.6/, Jun 19, 2013.. Licensed under CC BY 3.0 via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2104_Three_Major_Capillary_Types.jpg#/media/File:2104_Three_Major_Capillary_Types.jpg

Page 16: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Capacitance and dP/dT

This model is a bit unrealistic because it only considers compliance….

Page 17: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Flow Relationships in Different Vessels

Page 18: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Control of Microcirculation

Page 19: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Control of the Peripheral CirculationCentral Control

Control at the arteriole and venule level -- vasomotion of smooth muscle components of vessels

Adrenergic

• α1: vasoconstriction in skin, GI, coronary, kidney and brain

• β2: vasodilation of small coronary & sk mus arteries

Cholinergic -- M3 muscarinic receptor on vascular endothelial cells causes synthesis of NO that leads to vasodilation of smooth muscle

Page 20: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Local Control

Metabolites: H+, lactate, CO2 -- vasodilators

Adenosine, some prostaglandins are potent vasodilators

UTP and others are potent vasoconstrictors

Autoregulation -- changes in vasomotor tone in response to stretch induced by upstream/downstream changes in blood pressure

Page 21: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Local Control in the Brain’sPericytes

Peppiatt et al., Nature 2006 v443 p 700

Page 22: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Hydrostatic Filtration in Capillaries and the Formation of Interstitial Fluid/Lymph

Page 23: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Filtration: The Starling Hypothesis

Page 24: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Filtration in Capillaries

Page 25: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

"2108 Capillary Exchange" by OpenStax College - Anatomy & Physiology, Connexions Web site. http://cnx.org/content/col11496/1.6/, Jun 19, 2013.. Licensed under CC BY 3.0 via Commons - https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2108_Capillary_Exchange.jpg#/media/File:2108_Capillary_Exchange.jpg

Another View

Page 26: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Large-scale Influences on Blood Flow

Page 27: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Mean Arterial Pressure

Page 28: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Mean Arterial Pressure and SV

Page 29: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Total Peripheral Resistance

Page 30: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

End-Resistance and Pressure

Note greater filling with higher R.

Page 31: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Changes in Capacitance

Remember -- low capacitance is high elastance

Page 32: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Capacitance and ΔP/ΔT

1.

2.

So:

The rate at which pressure changes is directly proportional to the volume flow and inversely proportional to the vessel capacitance.

Page 33: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Vessel Compliance and Age in Humans

Page 34: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Resistance/Capacitance Considered Together When we consider compliance (capacitance) and resistance, the way we need to look at in arteries is different than how we looked at it in electrical circuits.

The crucial consideration is that arterial compliances have both and inflow and outflow.• Inflow is largely determined by stroke volume – resistance at this end is usually

constant.• Outflow is determined by resistance of the arterioles, which can change rapidly.

With a constant stroke volume, what is the effect of an increased peripheral resistance on dP/dt in the arteries? Of decreased capacitance?(Note that increased peripheral resistance and decreased capacitance often go together in vascular disease.)

Page 35: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

Hydraulic Filtration in the Arteries

What is the effect of reduced peripheral resistance on filtering?

Non-patent valve? Reduced capacitance?

Page 36: Important Measures of Flow pressure, P, – force/area, usually given as mmHg or kPa volume, V or q, given as liters or some fraction particle velocity,

The Effect of Arterial Compliance on the Work of the Heart

(From pump to vessel)