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Lab This Week: EKGs and Blood Pressure

Date post: 06-Jan-2016
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Lab This Week: EKGs and Blood Pressure. Bring textbook Bring calculator Wear clothes and shoes for running stairs Easy access to wrist and ankles for ECG electrodes Easy access to arms for Blood Pressure measurement Wear Wofford logo if you wanna be in Olencki pics. Revising Abstracts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Lab This Week: EKGs and Blood Pressure • Bring textbook • Bring calculator • Wear clothes and shoes for running stairs • Easy access to wrist and ankles for ECG electrodes • Easy access to arms for Blood Pressure measurement Wear Wofford logo if you wanna be in Olencki pics
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Page 1: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Lab This Week: EKGs and Blood Pressure

• Bring textbook• Bring calculator• Wear clothes and shoes for running stairs• Easy access to wrist and ankles for ECG

electrodes• Easy access to arms for Blood Pressure

measurement• Wear Wofford logo if you wanna be in Olencki pics

Page 2: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Revising Abstracts

Instructions forthcoming.Due date to be announced.Keep all papers together for resubmission!

Page 3: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

For Friday Quiz• Be prepared to draw and label

electrocardiograms for– Normal– 1st degree heart block– 2nd degree heart block

• Be able to diagnose from an ECG– Atrial fibrillation– Ventricular fibrillation– Premature ventricular systole– 3rd degree heart block

Page 4: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

1QQ#26 for 10:30a) Catecholamines acting on beta-adrenergic

receptors cause arteriolar smooth muscles to relax.

b) Vasopressin is a vasoconstrictor.c) Of the several modes of exchange in capillaries,

diffusion is the most important for the delivery of nutrients and removal of wastes.

d) There are five Starling forces.e) For bulk flow, water and colloids move through

aqueous channels and intracellular clefts.e) Was not graded. I intended the term to be intercellular clefts and I didn’t do a good job of making a distinction.

Page 5: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

1QQ#26 for 11:30a) Catecholamines acting on alpha-adrenergic receptors

cause arteriolar smooth muscles to relax.b) Endothelin-1 is a vasoconstrictor.c) Of the several modes of exchange in capillaries, bulk

flow is the most important for the delivery of nutrients and removal of wastes.

d) There are only three Starling forces.e) During bulk flow in capillaries, water and crystalloids

move through aqueous channels and intracellular clefts.

e) Was not graded. I intended the term to be intercellular clefts and I didn’t do a good job of making a distinction.

Page 6: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Figure 12.42

Main difference in the Pulmonary circuit?

Net filtration = 4L/day

Bulk Flow through aqueous channels and intracellular clefts

Regulated by arterioles

Starling Forces

S 10

Page 7: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Bulk Flow and Starling Forces

Page 8: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Who Cares?Aunt Esther

Cancer of the liver;Failure of hepatocytes to produce plasma colloids

S 12

Page 9: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Pc

∏c

Aunt Ester

Page 10: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Actions of Histamine and antihistamines

Pc

∏c

Hypotension

Page 11: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Fig. 12.43

Pc

Pc

Pc

S 11

Page 12: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Figure 12.47

Liver &Bone Marrow

& Spleen

Fate of 4 L/d excess filtrate

S 1

Mode of propulsion?

Page 13: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Filariasis in Haiti: Washington Post Article

Page 14: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Figure 12.44Veins are

Capacitance vessels(high compliance)

with valves for unidirectional flow

Arteries are low compliance,

so any increase in volume increases

pressure.

S 2

Page 15: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Fig. 12.53

MAP = CO x TPR

Negative feedback control:stimulus, receptors, afferent pathway(s), integrator, efferent pathway(s), effector(s)response(s)

S 3

Page 16: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Fig. 12.54

S 4

What happens to the set point for MAP during exercise?

Page 17: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

Story Time

A Neuroscientist in New Orleans

S 5

Page 18: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

MAP = CO x TPR

Mean Arterial Pressure = Cardiac Output x Total Peripheral Resistance

MAP = (HR x SV) x TPR

S 2

Creating your Hemorrhage Diagram

Loss of 1 liter of blood from vein → ↓ blood volume → ↓ MAP → …..

Page 19: Lab This Week:   EKGs and Blood Pressure

 Beginning with a loss of about 1 liter of blood from a vein, diagram the early events associated with hemorrhage and the negative feedback responses to hemorrhage in a well-organized diagram. Write legibly! Completeness, accuracy, and detail, together with the proper sequence earn maximal points.  The following abbreviations can be used: AI, AII, JGA, mAChR, Hct, Q, SV, EF, RBC, HR, EDV, ACh, ANH, ADH, CO, TPR, EPO, VR, MAP, EPI, NE, SAN, aAdR , bAdR, Symp (sympathetic), Parasymp (parasympathetic), PV, r (radius), Pc, fAP (frequency of action potentials.) Any other abbreviations must be defined. "If in doubt, write it out!" Use single headed arrows (→) to indicate sequential relationships and doubled-stemmed arrows to indicate increases or decreases.


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