Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBrendan Butler Modified over 9 years ago
1
Hemodynamics and Factors Affecting Blood Flow Amir Golnabi ENGS 166 Spring 2008
2
Outline: Blood Flow Blood Pressure –Facts –Mean Arterial Pressure –Total Blood Volume Vascular Resistance –Size Of The Lumen –Blood Viscosity –Total Length of Blood Vessel Conclusion –Rate of Blood Flow References
3
Blood Flow: Blood flow: Amount of blood that flows through any tissue in a given period of time (mL/min) Total blood flow: Volume of blood that circulates through the systemic and pulmonary blood vessels each minute → Cardiac Output (CO) Cardiac output (CO) = heart rate (HR) x stroke volume (SV) Distribution of CO into different body tissues: 1. Pressure difference of different parts of the body Pressure ↑ → Blood Flow ↑ 2. Resistance of specific blood vessels to blood flow Resistance ↑ → Blood Flow ↓
4
1. Blood Pressure (BP): Blood flow: ↑ Pressure → ↓ Pressure BP: Contraction of the ventricles → hydrostatic pressure exerted by blood on the walls of a blood vessel. Normal BP in a young adult at rest: – 110 mmHg during ventricular contraction, systole – 70 mmHg during ventricular relaxation, diastole – Systemic Circulation: Tortora, Gerard, and Bryan Derrickson. Principles of Anatomy and Physiology. Wiley, 2006. 747.
5
Blood Pressure (cont.): Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP): The average blood pressure in arteries → closer to diastolic pressure during the greater portion of the cardiac cycle MAP = diastolic BP + 1/3(systolic BP – diastolic BP) (80 + 1/3(120 – 80)) = 93 mmHg CO = HR x SV CO = MAP/R where R is the vascular resistance MAP = CO x R SV ↑ or HR ↑ → CO ↑ and if R stays constant → MAP ↑
6
Blood Pressure (cont.): Total volume of blood in the cardiovascular system: 5 liters of blood in total – Modest decrease in BV → Homeostatic mechanism – More than 10% → BP ↓ – Water retention → BP ↑
7
2. Vascular Resistance: Friction between blood and the walls of blood vessels: resists to blood flow Vascular resistance depends on three factors: (1) Size of the blood vessels (2) Blood viscosity (3) Total blood vessels length
8
2.1. Size of Blood Vessels: Size of the lumen of a blood vessel ↓ → Resistance to blood flow ↑ “forth power law”: the resistance increases in proportion to the inverse of the forth power of the diameter: Vasoconstriction: Narrowing of the vessels resulting from contraction of the muscular wall of the vessels Vasodilation: Widening of the vessels resulting from relaxation of the muscular wall of the vessels constant fluctuations → Resistance → BP
9
2.2. Blood Viscosity: Shearing force F Different layers of the blood move with different velocities causing a shearing action (friction) between them Rate of shear (γ) is the relative displacement of one fluid layer with respect to the next –slope of the velocity profile: v/h Blood moves by the action of shear stress – the force per area, τ = F/A Viscosity: – η = shear stress / shear rate = τ / γ
10
2.2. Blood Viscosity (cont.): Blood: – Plasma: 0.015 Poise – Hematocrit (Ht): normally about 46% for men and 38% for women Factors: – Size of blood vessels ↓ → Velocity (shear rate) ↑ → Viscosity ↓ – Temperature ↓ → Viscosity ↑ 1ºC ↓ → Viscosity ↑ by 2%
11
2.3. total length of blood vessel: Resistance to blood flow through a vessel ≈ total length of blood vessel Hypertension → additional blood vessels in the adipose tissue → total blood vessel length is longer → resistance to blood flow ↑ → blood pressure ↑ For each extra kilogram of fat, an estimated 650 km (about 400 miles) of additional blood vessels can develop in our body!!!
12
Rate of Blood Flow Poiseuille’s Law: – F: rate of blood flow – ∆P: pressure difference between two ends of the vessel – r: radius of the vessel – η: blood viscosity – l: length of the vessel
13
References: "An Introduction to Blood Pressure". Maryland Virtual High School of Science and Mathematics. 04/27/2008. Bipin, Upadhyay. "BLOOD VISCOSITY FUNCTIONAL PARAMETERS". COLLEGE OF BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING AND APPLIED SCIENCES. 04/28/2008. Freeman, Scott. Biological Science. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Prentice Hall, 2005. Guyton, Arthur, and John Hall. Textbook of Medical Physiology. PA: Elsevier, 2006. Purves, William K.; David Sadava, Gordon H. Orians, H. Craig Heller (2004). Life: The Science of Biology, 7th, Sunderland, Mass: Sinauer Associates, 954. Tortora, Gerard, and Bryan Derrickson. Principles of Anatomy and Physiology. Wiley, 2006.
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com Inc.
All rights reserved.