Regulation of Blood Flow Assoc. Prof. MUDr. Markéta Bébarová, Ph.D. Dept. of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University This presentation includes only the most important terms and facts. Its content by itself is not a sufficient source of information required to pass the Physiology exam. Definition of Blood Flow mathematical formulation – analogy with the electric current Ohm´s law I = U / R Q = P / R Q blood flow P difference of pressure at the R resistance of the vessel (peripheral resistance) beginning and at the end of a vessel Definition of Blood Flow Hagen - Poiseuille formula r radius of the vessel η viscosity of the blood l length of the vessel This formula applies to the steady laminar flow in a rigid tube! Q = P / R R = 8ηl / πr4 Q = P . πr4 / 8ηl Viscosity of the blood is not constant, it is proportional to the haematocrit and to the velocity of blood flow. The blood flow is not laminar in fact, erythrocytes concentrate in the middle (plasma skimming). The turbulent flow. Elasticity of vessels. P Q rigid tube critical closing pressure vessel Methods for Measuring Blood Flow A. with a cannula inserted into a vessel 1. Electrical Induction Principle B. without direct contact with the blood flow 3. Plethysmography 2. Doppler Effect 4. Fick Principle Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 1. Electrical Induction Principle (Faraday, 1791-1867) ❖ the electromagnetic flowmeter ❖ an electromotive force is generated in the blood (as a conductor) when it moves through a magnetic field ❖ can detect changes in the velocity <0.01 s → recording of both steady blood flow and its pulsatile changes ❖ this electromotive force (measured with an electrode placed on the vessel surface) is proportional to the velocity of blood flow ❖ change of the wave length (frequency) is proportinal to the velocity of blood flow Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 2. Doppler Effect (Christian Doppler, Praque 1842) ❖ the ultrasonic Doppler flowmeter; most common • ultrasonic waves of a known wave length (frequency) are sent into a vessel diagonally along the blood stream from a subtle piezoelectric crystal • waves reflect from the red and white blood cells → a change (↑) of the wave length (↓ frequency) • reflected waves are picked up by a sensor ❖ both steady blood flow and its pulsatile changes can be measured Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 3. Plethysmography ❖ usually as the venous occlusion plethysmography • venous drainage of the limb is stopped (e.g. with an arm cuff) • increasing volume of the limb (expelling water from closed chamber, measured as a change of its volume) is lineary proportional to the arterial inflow of blood ❖ can be used on limbs Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 3. Plethysmography ❖ usually as the venous occlusion plethysmography • venous drainage of the limb is stopped (e.g. with an arm cuff) • increasing volume of the limb (expelling water from closed chamber, measured as a change of its volume) is lineary proportional to the arterial inflow of blood ❖ can be used on limbs http://schueler.ws/?page_id=21 4. Fick Principle Methods for Measuring Blood Flow The blood catches 50 ml O2 / 1 l during passage through the lungs. • blood flowing from the right heart to the lungs – about 150 ml O2 / 1 l (a sample of the mixed venous blood bleeded from the pulmonary artery with a catheter inserted to the brachial vene) • blood flowing from the lungs to the left heart – about 200 ml O2 / 1 l (a sample of the arterial blood from any artery, arterial O2 content is uniform) • The total O2 consumption is 250 ml / 1 min. (O2 decay in the expired air compared to the inspired air, oximeter) 250 ml O2 / min = 5 l / min 50 ml O2 / l CO = Q = AV diff A / time - Direct Fick Method Methods for Measuring Blood Flow Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 4. Fick Principle – Method of Indicatory Gas ❖ to determine the instantaneous blood flow through a specific tissue ❖ for example the cerebral or coronary blood flow using inhaled nitrous oxide N2O – Kety method N2O removed from blood by brain / time averaged arteriovenous difference of N2O cerebral blood flow = N2O concentration in the venous blood Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 4. Fick Principle - Indicator Dilution Technique • known amount of an indicator (dye or radioactive isotope) is injected into a peripheral (an arm) vein (A, [mg]) • concentration of the indicator in serial samples of the arterial blood is determined • estimation of the averaged concentration of the indicator in the arterial blood after a single circulation (C, [mg/ml]) A C (t2 - t1) CO = [mg] [mg.ml-1.s] Methods for Measuring Blood Flow 4. Fick Principle - Indicator Dilution Technique • known amount of an indicator (dye or radioactive isotope) is injected into a peripheral (an arm) vein (A, [mg]) • concentration of the indicator in serial samples of the arterial blood is determined ❖ thermodilution a cold saline (indicator) is injected into the right atrium through a double lumen catheter; the change of blood temperature (inversely proportinal to the blood flow) is recorded in the pulmonary artery using a thermistor in the other side of the catheter • estimation of the averaged concentration of the indicator in the arterial blood after a single circulation (C, [mg/ml]) Regulation Systemic Local Regulation of Blood Flow Q = P . πr4 / 8ηl Resting Tone (intermediary vascular muscle tone at rest) ❖ due to tonic activity of vasocontrictive sympathetic fibres ❖ a role might play also: myogenic response of vessels to the blood pressure (later), high concentration of O2 in the arterial blood, Ca2+ Basal Tone ❖ in response to denervation; due to spontaneous depolarizations of the vascular smooth muscles Regulation of Blood Flow - Local 1. Metabolic Autoregulation 2. Myogenic Autoregulation 3. Regulation Mediated by Local Substances A. Acute B. Chronic seconds to minutes, but incomplete (about ¾ of the desired effect) hours, days to weeks , even months A. Acute 1. Metabolic Autoregulation Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Metabolic Autoregulation Preferred to the systemic regulation in case of hypoxia (to preserve the adequate tissue perfusion). insufficient blood flow ↑ concentration of metabolites (CO2, lactic acid, adenosine, K+, phoshate), ↓ pH, ↑ osmolarity in the interstitium, ↑ tissue temperature (the metabolic heat); ↓ pO2 (the second theory based on the lack of O2 and nutrients) vasodilatation It plays the key role in e.g. brain, heart and skeletal muscles. ↑ metabolic demands of a tissue ↓ or stopped blood supply Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Metabolic Autoregulation active hyperemia (increase of the blood flow induced by an increased metabolic activity of the tissue) reactive hyperemia (transient increase of the blood flow exceeding its common level after release of an occlusion; it gradually returns to the control level) (15-, 30- and 60-s occlusions of the femoral artery in a dog) Regulation of Blood Flow - Local 1. Metabolic Autoregulation 2. Myogenic Autoregulation 3. Regulation Mediated by Local Substances A. Acute B. Chronic seconds to minutes, but incomplete (about ¾ of the desired effect) hours, days to weeks , even months A. Acute 2. Myogenic Autoregulation It plays an important role in the brain and kidneys. Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Myogenic Autoregulation (Bayliss effect) blood pressure↑ ↑ blood flow and tension in the vascular wall↑ mechanical stimulation, depolarization and subsequent contraction of the smooth muscle cells in the vascular wall → vasoconstriction return of the blood flow back on the original level T = P . r Law of LaplaceQ = P / R Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Myogenic Autoregulation Regulation of Blood Flow - Local 1. Metabolic Autoregulation 2. Myogenic Autoregulation 3. Regulation Mediated by Local Substances A. Acute B. Chronic seconds to minutes, but incomplete (about ¾ of the desired effect) hours, days to weeks , even months A. Acute 3. Regulation Mediated by Local Substances Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Regulation Mediated by Local Substances ❖ important in the intermediate and larger arteries back upstream where the metabolic tissue changes causing dilatation of the microvessels cannot directly reach endothelial-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) – NO (half-life in the blood only 6 s) → vasodilatation ❖ synthesized in the endothelial cells of arteriols and small arteries due to the shear stress induced by the flowing blood (deforms the endothelial cells in the direction of flow) ❖ its synthesis stimulated by the products of thrombocyte aggregation (to keep vessels with intact endothelium permeable) and also by many primary vasoconstrictive substances Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Regulation Mediated by Local Substances endothelial-derived relaxing factor (EDRF) – NO Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Regulation Mediated by Local Substances prostacyclin ❖ synthesized in the endothelial cells from the arachidonic acid ❖ inhibition of thrombocyte aggregation and vasodilation thromboxane A2 ❖ synthesized from the arachidonic acid by thrombocytes ❖ support of thrombocyte aggregation and vasoconstriction A balance between them is crucial for formation of the localized clot and preservation of the blood flow. (aspirin) Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Regulation Mediated by Local Substances endothelins ❖ several similar polypeptides synthesized by the endothelial cells (ET-1, ET-2, ET-3 ) ❖ ET-1 – one of the most potent vasoconstrictive substances ❖ 2 endothelin receptors: ETA – specific for ET-1, in many tissue vessels, → vasoconstriction ETB – ET-1 to ET-3, unknown function (maybe vasodilatation – through increased synthesis of NO - and developmental effects) ❖ the exact physiological role not known ❖ released from the endothelial cells in the damaged tissue → vasoconstriction → restricts bleeding ❖ play a role in closing ductus arteriosus at birth Serotonin (5-OH tryptamine) ❖vasodilatory effect • in an undamaged tissue • through increased activity of NO synthase ❖vasoconstrictive effect • in a damaged tissue • direct local effect • released from thrombocytes Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Other, specific mechanisms ❖ local vasoconstriction of damaged arteries and arteriols ❖ vasoconstriction (vasodilatation) induced by a decrease (increase) of the tissue temperature ❖ specialized tissues (kidneys, brain, etc.) (due to release of serotonin and thromboxane A2 from thrombocytes and endothelin-1 from the endothelial cells) Regulation of Blood Flow - Local 1. Metabolic Autoregulation 2. Myogenic Autoregulation 3. Regulation Mediated by Local Substances A. Acute B. Chronic seconds to minutes, but incomplete (about ¾ of the desired effect) hours, days to weeks , even months Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Chronic regulation It is especially important in case of the long-term change of metabolic demands of a tissue - to provide sufficient blood flow without circulation overload. Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Chronic regulation ❖ mediated by changes of the tissue vascularity ❖ proceeds fast (within days) in the young individuals and in newly formed tissue (new scar, tumor tissue) vs. within even months in the elderly and differentiated tissues ❖ the key role – lack of O2 (higher altitude, retrolental fibroplasia in premature newborns after the curative stay in the oxygen tent) and also nutrients ❖ identified number of factors increasing grow of new vessels - angiogenic or vascular growth factors - small peptides, best characterized: vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF), fibroblast growth factor, and angiogenin Regulation of Blood Flow - Local Chronic regulation Guyton and Hall - Textbook of Medical Physiology (12th edition) unstimulated muscle regularly stimulated muscle Regulation of Blood Flow Local Systemic B. Humoral A. Neural B. Humoral Regulation of Blood Flow - Systemic Vasoconstrictive substances Humoral regulation ❖ epinephrine (high levels) → vasodilatation in the skeletal muscles, liver and coronary arteries (β2-rec.) → vasoconstriction in other tissues ❖ norepinephrine → generalized vasoconstriction (α1-rec.) (↑ BP → reflex bradycardia, ↓ CO) ❖ angiotensin II ↓ BP → ↑ sekretion of renin → formation of angiotensin II → generalized vasoconstriction (+ ↑ water intake and ↑ aldosterone) ❖ vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) → generalized vasoconstriction (+ ↑ reabsorption of water in the kidneys) Regulation of Blood Flow - Systemic Vasodilatory substances Humoral regulation • released in tissues (from the mast cells), or from basophiles in the blood, during tissue damage or inflammation (also allergic) ❖histamine →vasodilatation of arteriols + ↑ permeability of capillaries (edemas; anaphylactic shock) ❖ VIP (vasoactive intestinal peptide) → vasodilatation (+ many other effects in GIT, namely relaxation of the intestinal smooth muscles including sphincters) ❖ atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) → ↓ reactivity of the vascular smooth muscles on vasoconstrictive stimulation (+ ↑ natriuresis – relaxation of the measangial cells and, thus, ↑ glomerular filtration rate, + inhibition of vasopressine secretion, + ↓ aldosterone) through EDRF (vasoconstrictor by itself) • small polypeptides, half-life - several minutes Regulation of Blood Flow - Systemic Vasodilatory substances Humoral regulation ❖kinins - bradykinin and lysylbradykinin (kallidin) →vasodilatation of arteriols + ↑ permeability of capillaries regulation of the blood flow and leak of fluids from capillaries in the inflamed tissue + regulation of the blood flow in the skin, salivary and GIT glands in common conditions (similar to histamine) Regulation of Blood Flow - Systemic Other factors Humoral regulation ❖ions vasoconstriction: ↑ Ca2+, slightly ↓ H+ vasodilatation: ↑ K+, ↑ Mg2+; ↑ H+, notably ↓ H+ acetate, citrate (anions) – only mild effect