The Circulation: Dr. Adelina Vlad
The Circulation: Dr. Adelina Vlad
The Circulation: Dr. Adelina Vlad
high pressure from the heart to the tissues The microcirculation, a diffusion and filtration system The veins (and lymph vessels), a collection system that transports blood under low pressure from tissues to the heart
Distribution of blood
Mean linear velocity of blood ow is inversely proportional to aggregate vascular cross-sectional area: - 21 cm/s in the aorta - 0.03 cm/s in the capillaries, under resting conditions - 14 cm/s in venae cavae
LV
0 mm Hg
RV
Normal blood pressures in the different portions of the circulatory system when a person is lying in the horizontal position
HEMODYNAMICS
Is the study of the physical laws of blood circulation
Addresses the properties of The container blood vessels The content blood
resistances
factors: pressure difference DP of the blood between an upstream point and a downstream site = pressure gradient along the vessel, which is the driving force of the blood flow vascular resistance R between those two points, which is the impediment to blood ow through the vessel The analogous of Ohms law of electricity for direct current I = DV/R, is the Ohms low of hydrodynamics:
Blood Flow
in the circulation in a given period of time ( Dt): F = DV/Dt The flow of blood delivered each minute by the heart, or the total mean flow in the circulation is the cardiac output CO = SV x HR = 5 liters/min at rest
F = P/R = cardiac output (l/min or ml/min) P = pressure difference between Ao and VC (mm Hg), or
between PA and PVs R = total peripheral resistance (TPR) (mmHg/ml/min) in systemic or pulmonary circulation
circulation in a given period of time (Dt): F = DV/ Dt DV = A x Dx if A is the cross-section area of the blood vessel and Dx the distance the blood bolus advances in Dt with a mean velocity v; therefore:
Dx
Principle of Continuity
In any steady-state process, the rate at which the mass enters the
system must equal the rate at which mass leaves the system flow in = flow out
Hemodynamic applications
Two sets of vessels in series (systemic and pulmonary circulation)
have the same flow CO of the right and left heart must be equal
The aggregate flow at any level of vascular arborization must
be the same
The mean linear velocity of blood ow is inversely proportional to vascular cross-sectional area
The aggregate crosssectional area of each vascular teritory and the blood velocity through it are mirror images of one another
ARTERIOLES 2 107
1.13 cm 4 cm2
4 cm2
CAPILLARIES 1 1010 open (4 1010 total) 3 m 2.8 10-7 cm2 2827 cm2
VENA CAVA 1
1.38 cm 6 cm2
6 cm2
Aggregate flow
Mean linear velocity
Single-unit flow
Poiseuilles Law
The flow can be predicted from the geometry of the vessel and
constant radius The velocity of the thin fluid layer at the wall must be zero (no slippage) The flow must be laminar
The viscosity of the fluid must be constant The flow must be steady (not pulsatile)
blood remaining the same distance from the vessel wall Turbulent ow - blood ows in all directions inside the vessel and mixes continuously
Occurs at high flow rates (beyond a
critical velocity), when blood passes by an obstruction in a vessel or when it makes a sharp turn A turbulent flow is not anymore proportional to DP, but to roughly the square root of DP because R increases turbulence causes kinetic energy losses Vortex formation during turbulence sets up murmurs
Reynolds Number
Is a parameter that determines when flow becomes turbulent
r tube radius, v velocity, r density, h - viscosity Turbulent blood flow occurs when vessel radius (r) is large (aorta) or blood velocity (v) is high (high cardiac output); also, when local decrease in vessel diameter causes an increase in v (arterial stenosis or external compression) viscosity (h) lowers (anemia); viscosity reflects the cohesive forces that tend to keep the layers well organized Re < 2000 laminar flow; Re > 3000 turbulent flow Murmurs occur in: vascular stenosis, shunts, cardiac valvular lesions
Raynolds Number
Re=2rvr/h
The Reynolds number gives a measure of the ratio of inertial forces to viscous forces:
at low Re, viscous forces (2r/h) are dominant laminar flow
produce random eddies, vortices and other flow instabilities turbulent flow
vessel wall, relative to the barometric pressure (PB) Standard units of pressure: mm Hg or cm H2O for clinicians (P = rgh) 1 mm Hg pressure = 1.36 cm H2O pressure Pascals, g/cm2, or dynes/cm2 for physicists
blood to flow from x1 to x2; in the circulation, it is the P between the arterial and venous ends of the systemic (or pulmonary) circulation Transmural pressure, the P between r1 and r2, is the difference between the intravascular pressure and the tissue pressure Hydrostatic pressure, the P between point h1 and h2 along the height axis, it exists even in the absence of any blood flow
3.
4.
2. Gravity
Causes hydrostatic pressure when there is a difference in height:
DP = rgDh
In the cardiovascular system, the reference h level (zero height)
is the level of the heart; here the pressure is unaffected by changes of body posture
Horizontal position: relatively constant intravascular pressures
pressures (P) between arteries and veins are the same (separation between red and blue lines, violet background)
3. Viscous Resistance
Blood viscosity, h, is the internal friction of blood layers
According to Poiseuilles law
DP = F x 8hl /pr4
an increase in blood viscosity generates a rise of blood pressure by increasing resistance
intravascular pressure: The fluid pressure (potential energy, p) must decrease when velocity (kinetic energy, v2) increases to satisfy conservation of energy or Bernoulli equation
p + v2 + g h = ct,
and for horizontal fluid flows: p + v2 = ct
Or: Total energy = potential energy + kinetic energy = constant
Bernoulli Effect
Pressure decreases when the velocity of blood flow increases
F = A1 x v1 = A2 x v2 v2 > v1
P1 + v12 = P2 + v22 = ct
P2 < P1
total pressure difference, instead of being given by Ohm's law of hydrodynamics (DP = F x R), is
Inertia is the resistance of any physical object to a change in its state of motion and reflects the trade-off between kinetic (velocity) and potential energy (pressure) inertiance refers to Bernoulli effect in vessels where velocity changes due to cardiac cycle or pathological events
Vascular Impedance
Both P and F through arteries are pulsatile during a cardiac
DP = F
the vessel) Viscous (or resistive) impedance that opposes flow (shearing forces in the liquid); this term is the "R" of Ohm's law of hydrodynamics: DP = F R that applies to steady P and F Inertial impedance that opposes a change of flow (kinetic energy of fluid and vessels)
Conclusion: When F and P oscillate, P/F = Z that depends not only on R, but on compliance and inertial properties of the vessels and blood as well
E=I
Z,
resistance electrical capacitance C - hydrodynamic analogy = compliance electrical inductance L - hydrodynamic analogy = inertiance
hydrodynamics
R = DP/ F,
an approach independent of geometry, applicable to very complex circuits, such as the entire peripheral circulation
Units of resistance: PRUs (peripheral resistance unit): mm Hg/(ml/sec)
C = F/DP = 1/R
Unit measure: (ml/sec)/mm Hg
R Is Inversely Proportional to r4
R derived from Poiseuilles law is
R = 8hl /pr4
which states that for an individual unbranched, rigid vascular segment with a laminar blood flow the resistance increases tremendously with the decrease of the vessel radius
For a constant DP, a four fold decrease in vessel diameter decreases the flow (increases the R) as much as 256-fold
resistance in arterioles exceeds total resistance in capillaries Why? Because the aggregate resistance of vessels of a particular order of arborization depends not only on r, but also on the number of vessels in parallel
PARAMETER Internal radius (ri) Individual resistance (Ri) (dyne s/cm5) Number of units
Total resistance (dyne s/cm5)
1010
3
through the circuit because each parallel vessel provides another pathway for blood ow
or
The total resistance is far less than the resistance of any single
blood vessel
However, increasing the resistance of any of the blood vessels
The overall resistance across a circulatory bed results from parallel and serial arrangements of branches
Viscous Resistance
If the flow fulfills Poiseuilles requirements, R can be expressed
in terms of vessel dimensions (r, l) and viscous properties of the blood (h)
fluid are shearing against each other Unit of viscosity: poise (P) Whole blood viscosity = 3 cP
The shearing laminae of the blood are concentric cylinders A very thin layer of blood close to the wall cannot move due to
cohesive forces between the blood and the inner surface of the vessel wall The velocities increase from the wall to the center of the cylinder the velocity profile is a parabola with a maximum velocity at the central axis
4) 5)
Temperature
1)
Fibrinogen Major plasma protein; key element in the coagulation cascade Induces erythrocyte aggregation, which is thought to be caused by a non-specific binding mechanism increased whole blood viscosity in the presence of fibrinogen
2)
Hematocrit It is the percentage of the blood that is cells (normal: 35 50%) Raising the hematocrit increases the interactions among RBCs increases viscosity At hematocrits above 60%, cell-cell interactions deform the RBCs, leading to a steeper increase in viscosity
3)
Vessel radius Viscosity decreases steeply at radii < 1 mm (FahraeusLindqvist phenomenon) due to: Axial accumulation of RBCs (plasma imparts a spin to peripheral RBCs) plasma layer close to the wall, where the shearing forces are the greatest Limited number of RBCs floating inside very small vessels (tank treading of RBCs, deformation of RBCs)
4) Velocity of flow The tendency for RBCs to move to the center of the stream requires a certain flow low velocities lead to increased viscosity
5) Temperature Low temperature increases viscosity (intense cooling of the extremities), due to an increase of the cohesive forces between molecules The presence of cryoglobulins (infections, autoimmune and lymphoproliferative disorders) that precipitate at less than 37 C can lead to vessel obstruction due to increased viscosity
(predominant) allowing up to four-fold variation in vessel diameter Lowering or increasing r by arteriolar VSMCs contraction/ relaxation under humoral or nervous influences can change R as much as 100-fold
Pressure-Flow-Resistance Relationship
Poiseuilles law predicts a linear pressure-flow relationship in
rigid tubes
In real vessels an increase in pressure not only imparts a
stronger impulse to the blood column (linear P - F relationship), but also distends the elastic arterial wall decrease of R which further increases F nonlinear pressure-flow relationship in elastic vascular beds
An increase in active tension (VSMCs contraction after
sympathetic stimulation) increases R and the stiffness of the walls, making the P-F relationship more linear and shifted to the right
20
40
60
80
100
Vascular Distensibility
Expresses the elastic properties of blood vessels
Is a property of great functional value because Influences the pressure-resistance-flow relationship
systole and diastole Influences the volume of blood that can be accommodate by a vessel
= (DV/V0)/DP
Vascular Distensibility
Depends on the structural particulars of each type of vessel
- arteries are 8 times less distensible than the veins in systemic circulation
- pulmonary arteries are about 6 times more distensible than systemic arteries
adventitia; exception capillaries have only intima The vascular wall has four major components whose relative abundance varies along the vascular circuit: endothelial cells, elastic fibers, VSMCs and collagen fibers
high at a normal pressure range, their ability to accommodate large volumes of blood for each mm Hg is rather the result of a change in shape
Relative volume of 100% represents fully relaxed volume
raise in pressure, proving that arteries have a moderate compliance, whereas veins can accommodate several hundreds ml of blood for an increase in pressure of only 3 5 mm Hg, acting as blood reservoirs Sympathetic stimulation decreases the arterial and venous capacitance by VSMCs contraction
It is an important response for redistribution of blood among
vascular territories increasing venous return which eventually increases cardiac output (Frank-Starling law) maintaining blood pressure during hemorrhage
Delayed Compliance
A vessel exposed to increased volume at rst exhibits a large
increase in pressure (immediate elastic distention), but the pressure returns back toward normal over a period of minutes to hours = stress-relaxation the circulation can accommodate much extra blood when necessary Delayed compliance in the reverse direction: the circulation automatically adjusts itself (minutes hours) to diminished blood volume after a serious hemorrhage
Stress-relaxation and reverse stress-relaxation
are properties of smooth muscle they allow a hollow organ to maintain about the same amount
pressure that corresponds to the contraction of the ventricle and a minimal diastolic arterial pressure that corresponds to the relaxation of the ventricle
Why?
During systole the pressure imparted by the heart to the blood column rises dilation of the arterial wall that stores a volume of fluid the flow rises gradually towards its maximal value During diastole the pressure generated by the ventricle falls to zero the expanded vessel comes to the initial size, delivering its stored volume downstream flow and an intravascular pressure that drops smoothly from the systolic value during diastole
Pulse Pressure
Pulse pressure is the difference between the systolic and the
diastolic pressure Major factors affecting the pulse pressure: 1) the stroke volume output of the heart 2) the compliance of the arterial tree Pulse pressure is determined approximately by the ratio of stroke volume output to compliance of the arterial tree
LV ejection along the arterial walls is called transmission of the pressure pulse in the arteries
Pressure pulse - a moving wave of pressure that involves little
forward total movement of blood volume The greater the compliance of each vascular segment, the slower the velocity, because some of the energy of the pressure pulse goes into dilating the vessel: 3 to 5 m/sec in the normal aorta 7 to 10 m/sec in the large arterial branches 15 to 35 m/sec in the small arteries
!!! The velocity of transmission of the pressure pulse is much higher than the velocity of blood ow
smaller arteries, the arterioles, and, especially, the capillaries Damping of the pressure pulses is determined by: 1) resistance to blood movement in the vessels 2) compliance of the vessels (aggregate compliance increases in the periphery) The degree of damping is almost directly proportional to the product of resistance times compliance
by millisecond during one cardiac cycle is determined about 60 per cent by the diastolic pressure and 40 per cent by the systolic pressure mean arterial pressure < average of systolic and diastolic pressure MAP = DBP + 1/3(SBP - DBP)
Systemic circulation Systolic pressure 120 mm Hg Diastolic pressure 80 mm Hg Pulmonary circulation Systolic pressure 25 mm Hg Diastolic pressure 8 mm Hg
Cardiac outputs of the left and right hearts are the same,
whereas the total resistance of the systemic circulation ( 1.1 PRU) is far higher than that of the pulmonary circulation ( 0.08 PRU) higher driving pressure in the systemic circulation
Pulmonary vessels are wider and shorter and have thinner and
pressure drops rather uniformly (pulmonary arterioles are less muscularly and have a lower resistance)
introduced in the vessel of interest - invasive, used only for special studies In clinics, the current approach for determining arterial systolic and diastolic pressure is the indirect, noninvasive auscultatory method; it usually gives values within 10% of those determined by direct catheter measurement
Auscultatory Method