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Cardiovascular Physiology

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Cardiovascular Physiology. Qiang XIA ( 夏强 ), PhD Department of Physiology Room C518, Block C, Research Building, School of Medicine Tel: 88208252 Email: [email protected]. Regulation of Cardiovascular Activities. Lecture Outline Nervous Regulation Humoral Regulation Autoregulation. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Cardiovascula r Physiology Qiang XIA ( ), PhD Department of Physiology Room C518, Block C, Research Building, School of Medicine Tel: 88208252 Email: [email protected]
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Page 1: Cardiovascular Physiology

Cardiovascular Physiology

Qiang XIA ( 夏强 ), PhDDepartment of Physiology

Room C518, Block C, Research Building, School of MedicineTel: 88208252

Email: [email protected]

Page 2: Cardiovascular Physiology

Regulation of Cardiovascular Activities

Lecture Outline

•Nervous Regulation

•Humoral Regulation

•Autoregulation

Page 3: Cardiovascular Physiology

Nervous Regulation

Page 4: Cardiovascular Physiology

Innervation of cardiovascular system

Page 5: Cardiovascular Physiology

Nervous regulation of the circulation

Page 6: Cardiovascular Physiology

Cardiac mechanisms of norepinephrine

Page 7: Cardiovascular Physiology

Mechanisms of norepinephrine

—increase Na+ & Ca2+ permeability

• If , phase 4 spontaneous depolarization,

autorhythmicity

• Ca2+ influx , phase 0 amplitude & velocity ,

conductivity

• Ca2+ influx , Ca2+ release , [Ca2+ ]i , contractility

Page 8: Cardiovascular Physiology

Asymmetrical innervation of sympathetic nerve

Page 9: Cardiovascular Physiology

Cardiac mechanisms of acetylcholine

Page 10: Cardiovascular Physiology

Mechanisms of acetylcholine

—increase K+ & decrease Ca2+ permeability

• K+ outward , |MRP| , phase 4 spontaneous

depolarization , autorhythmicity

• Inhibition of Ca2+ channel, phase 0 amplitude &

velocity , conductivity

• Ca2+ influx , [Ca2+ ]i , contractility

Page 11: Cardiovascular Physiology

Cardiac effect of parasympathetic stimulation

Page 12: Cardiovascular Physiology

Interaction of sympathetic and parasympathetic nerves

Page 13: Cardiovascular Physiology

Predominance of autonomic nerves

Page 14: Cardiovascular Physiology

Cardiovascular Center

A collection of functionally similar neurons that

help to regulate HR, SV, and blood vessel tone

Page 15: Cardiovascular Physiology

Vasomotor center

Located bilaterally mainly in the reticular substance of the medulla and of the lower third of the pons

– Vasoconstrictor area– Vasodilator area– Cardioinhibitor area – dorsal nuclei of the

vagus nerves and ambiguous nucleus

– Sensory area – tractus solitarius

Page 16: Cardiovascular Physiology

Vasomotor center

Page 17: Cardiovascular Physiology

– Reticular substance

of the pons

– Mesencephalon

– Diencephalon

– Hypothalamus

– Cerebral cortex

– Cerebellum

Higher cardiovascular centers

Page 18: Cardiovascular Physiology

Baroreceptor Reflexes

• Arterial baroreceptors– Carotid sinus receptor– Aortic arch receptor

• Afferent nerves (Buffer nerves)

• Cardiovascular center: medulla• Efferent nerves: cardiac sympathetic nerve,

sympathetic constrictor nerve, vagus nerve• Effector: heart & blood vessels

Page 19: Cardiovascular Physiology

Baroreceptor neurons function as sensors in the homeostatic maintenance of MAP by constantly monitoring pressure in the aortic arch and carotid sinuses.

Page 20: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 21: Cardiovascular Physiology

Characteristics of baroreceptors:

Sensitive to stretching of the vessel walls

Proportional firing rate to increased

stretching

Responding to pressures ranging from 60-

180 mmHg

Receptors within the aortic arch are less

sensitive than the carotid sinus receptors

Page 22: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 23: Cardiovascular Physiology

The action potential frequency in baroreceptor neurons is represented here as being directly proportional to MAP.

Page 24: Cardiovascular Physiology

Baroreceptor neurons deliver MAP information to the medulla oblongata’s cardiovascular control center (CVCC);the CVCC determines autonomic output to the heart.

i.e., MAP is above

homeostatic set point

i.e., reduce cardiac output

Page 25: Cardiovascular Physiology

Reflex pathway

Page 26: Cardiovascular Physiology

Click here to play theBaroreceptor Reflex Control

of Blood PressureFlash Animation

Page 27: Cardiovascular Physiology

Typical carotid sinus reflex

Page 28: Cardiovascular Physiology

Maintaining relatively

constant arterial

pressure, reducing the

variation in arterial

pressure

Physiological Significance

Page 29: Cardiovascular Physiology

Other Cardiovascular Reflexes

Click here to play theChemoreceptor Reflex Control

of Blood PressureFlash Animation

Page 30: Cardiovascular Physiology

Humoral Regulation

• Vasoconstrictor agents• Vasodilator agents

Page 31: Cardiovascular Physiology

Renin-angiotensin system

Page 32: Cardiovascular Physiology

Juxtaglomerular cell

Renin

Page 33: Cardiovascular Physiology

– Constricts resistance vessels

– Acts upon the adrenal cortex to release aldosterone

– Stimulates the release of vasopressin

– Facilitates norepinephrine release from sympathetic nerve endings

– Stimulates thirst centers within the brain

Physiological effects of angiotensin II

Page 34: Cardiovascular Physiology

Epinephrine & Norepinephrine

• Sources

Epinephrine----

adrenal medulla

Norepinephrine----

adrenal medulla

sympathetic nerves

Page 35: Cardiovascular Physiology

Catecholamines

Norepinephrine

Epinephrine

Page 36: Cardiovascular Physiology

Effects Epinephrine Norepinephrine

Receptor -adrenoceptor ++ +++

-adrenoceptor ++ +

Heart heart rate + + (in vitro)

- (in vivo)

cardiac output +++ ±

Vessels constriction (skin, visceral) + +++

relaxation (SM, liver) - +++

total peripheral resistance ± +++

Blood pressure systolic +++ +++

diastolic ± ++

MAP + ++

Clinical application positive inotropic pressor agent

agent

Page 37: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 38: Cardiovascular Physiology

Vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone, ADH)

Page 39: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 40: Cardiovascular Physiology

Endothelium-derived vasoactive substances

•Vasodilator factors

PGI2--prostacyclin

EDRF, NO--endothelium-derived relaxing factor, nitric oxide

EDHF--endothelium-dependent hyperpolarizing factor

•Vasoconstrictor factors Endothelin

Page 41: Cardiovascular Physiology

Atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP)

•Produces natriuresis and diuresis •Decreases renin release•Reduces total peripheral resistance via vasodilatation•Decreases heart rate, cardiac output

Page 42: Cardiovascular Physiology

Autoregulation

Definition:

Intrinsic ability of an organ to maintain a constant

blood flow despite changes in perfusion pressure,

independent of any neural or humoral influences

Page 43: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 44: Cardiovascular Physiology
Page 45: Cardiovascular Physiology

The End.


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