Regional Circulations (pulmonary, skin, muscle, cerebral, splanchnic, renal, fetal) Assoc. Prof. MUDr. Markéta Bébarová, Ph.D. Department of Physiology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University « C°i.TAS ulmonary Circulation /IV ulmonary Circulation • Blood flow through lungs is virtually equal to the blood flow through all other organs. • Functions: - provide the gas exchange - blood reservoir - mechanical, chemical and immunological filter ulmonary Circulation • Arteries (differences compared to the arteries in the systemic circulation) - bigger total cross-section of all pulmonary arteries - smaller thickness of the vessel walls - high compliance • Capillaries - wide, abundant anastomoses form a net surrounding alveoles - time of passage, area of perfused capillaries at rest and intensive exertion • Veins - high compliance (blood reservoir, ortopnoe) Blood pressure in pulmonary circulation CXI ulmonary Circulation Nutrient circulation - physiological arteriovenous shunt Pulmonary artery Pulmonary vein Bronchopulmonary arterial anastomosis \ Bronchial artery Bronchopulmonary vein Bronchial vein x Azygos vein Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Lymphatic vessels - fast transport of proteins and various particles from the peribronchial and perivascular tissue -»I formation of the tissue fluid ~ prevention of the pulmonary edema Minimal filtration in pulmonary capillaries physiologically! 1. pressures in intersticium and pulmonary capillaries 2. permeability of pulmonary capillaries As/ 1r. „-v z ulmonary Circulation • Regulation of blood flow in lungs A. Systemic mechanisms 1) Neural regulation (sympathicus, parasympathicus) 2) Humoral regulation (circulating substances) B. Local mechanisms - chemical (metabolic) autoregulation opposite reaction compared to systemic circulation (vasoconstriction) C. Passive factors - cardiac output ^ - gravity (blood distribution in lungs) ulmonary Circulation Ratio of ventilation and perfusion - kept constant (local metabolic autoregulation) non-ventilated alveolus - vasoconstriction non-perfused alveolus - bronchoconstriction Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition decreased ratio -most often cause of hypoxic hypoxia in clinical practise (right-left shunt) -> 1 arterial blood saturation with 02 CD 50 CM 8 Decreasing VA/Q Norma| Increasing VA/Q 0 50 100 Po2 (mm Hg) 150 content of C02 usually not changed (compensatory hyperventilation in other alveoles) 'Ja As/ in Circulation /IV • Skin blood flow considerably varies (0.02-5 l/min) Function: • Metabolic demands of skin - small {decubitus) Maintenance of body temperature Poikilothermie tissue Arteriovenous anastomoses Protection against environment Maintenance of mean blood pressure Arteriovenous anastomoses - convoluted muscle vessels directly connecting arteriols and venules (low-resistance shunt) capillaries V. Honzíkova N - Poznámky k přednáškám z fysiologie (1992) - regulated by sympathetic vasoconstrictive nerve fibers in Circulation • Regulation of skin blood flow: - Sympathetic nerve fibers - Humoral - local factors (histamine, Serotonine) • Reaction on a temperature change: 1) direct impact of a temperature change on the vessel tone 2) excitation of skin thermoreceptors 3) excitation of thermoreceptors in brain reflex modulation of sympathetic vasoconstrictive activity in Circulation Axon reflex Spinal cord Sensory neuron \ \ \ i-\ \ Endings in skin * Orthodromic conduction ■> Antidromic conduction ■*■ Direction taken by impulses Endings near arteriole Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition, .ŕ z uscle Circulation /IV uscle Circulation • Function: 1) Blood supply of muscles the resting blood flow - 18% of the cardiac output vs. even 90% at intensive exertion (the local blood flow t even 20times) 2) Regulation of blood pressure skeletal muscles - 40% of the body weight -» resistance of the muscle bloodstream has a high impact on the total peripheral resistance • The blood flow during muscle activity is intermittent, during the tetanic contraction even zero (oxygen debt). iVtv'i uscle Circulation • Regulation of the muscle blood flow: 1) Neural regulation dominates at rest (vasocontriction through sympathicus -big dilation reserve) 2) Local chemical regulation dominates at physical exertion (metabolic vasodilation) almost linear increase of the flow with increasing metabolic activity increased blood flow + increased 02 extraction t capillary pressure + | osmolarity -> | filtration edema in active muscles * erebral Circulation /IV erebral Circulation • provides: 1) constant sufficient blood supply (black-out during several seconds of the brain ischemia, irreversible damage during several minutes) 2) dynamic blood redistribution (metabolic hyperaemia) erebral Circulation • Anatomical specialities of cerebral circulation: 7) circulus arteriosus cerebri (interconnection of main cerebral arteries by anastomoses) 2) very high density of capillaries (3000 - 4000 capillaries / mm2 od the grey matter) ~ minimalization of diffuse distance for gases and other substances 3) very short arteriols (almost 1/2 of the vasal resistance falls on arteries which are abundantly innervated) ^ erebral Circulation Functional adaptation of cerebral circulation: 1 2 3 4 high and stable blood flow high 02 extraction well developed autoregulation (myogenic and metabolic) high reactivity on changes of C02 concentration local vs. total hypoxia innervation erebral Circulation • Special physical conditions of cerebral circulation: 1) solid cover of brain by skull Monro-Kelli theory ->• flow may be increased only by acceleration of the blood flow, not by an increase of capacity of the bloodstream ->• Cushing reflex 2) gravity orthostatic reaction (postural syncope) erebral Circulation • Blood-brain barrier cerebral capillaries - tight inter-endothelial connections erebral Circulation • Blood-brain barrier By free diffusion: lipophilic substances (02, C02, xenon; unbound forms of steroid hormones) water (aquaporins; osmolality of blood and cerebrospinal fluid is identical!) -» glucose - the main source of energy for neurons (free diffusion would be slow - accelerated by GLUT) By transcellular transport (regulated): ->ions {e.g. H+, HCO3" vs. C02 !) -» transporters for thyroid hormones, some organic acids, choline, precursors of nucleic acids, aminoacids, ... erebral Circulation • Blood-brain barrier • Functions: - maintenance of constant composition of the neuron environment - protection of brain against endogenic and exogenic toxins - prevention of loss of neurotransmitters to the bloodstream erebral Circulation Cerebrospinal fluid - localization - composition - volume -150 ml, rate of production -550 ml/d (exchange 3.7times/day) Substance CSF Plasma Ratio CSF/Plasma Na+ (meq/kg H20) 147.0 150.0 0.98 K+ (meq/kg H20) 2.9 4.6 0.62 Mg2+ (meq/kg H20) 2.2 1.6 1.39 Ca2+ (meq/kg H20} 2.3 4.7 0.49 cr (meq/kg H20) 113.0 99,0 1.14 HCO3- (meq/L) 25.1 24.8 1.01 Pco2 (mm Hg) 50.2 39.5 1.28 pH 7.33 7.40 Osmolality (mosm/kg H20) 289.0 289.0 1.00 Protein (mg/dL) 20.0 6000.0 0.003 Glucose (mg/dL) 64.0 100.0 0.64 Inorganic P (mg/dL) 3.4 4.7 0.73 Urea (mg/dL) 12.0 15.0 0.80 Creatinine (mg/dL) 1.5 1.2 1.25 Uric acid (mg/dL) 1.5 5,0 0.30 Cholesterol (mg/dL) 0.2 175.0 0.001 Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition erebral Circulation Cerebrospinal fluid Function: - protection of brain (together with menanges) Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Outer table of skull Trabecular bone Inner table of skull Dura mater Subdural (potential) space Arachnoid Subarachnoid space Arachnoid trabeculae Artery Pia mater Perivascular spaces Brain z erebral Circulation Cerebrospinal fluid 68 100 112 200 Outflow pressure (mm CSF) Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition As/ z Paraventricular organs ~ brain regions where the blood-brain barrier is missing (fenestrated capillaries) - secretion of polypeptides (oxytocin, vasopressin, ...), - chemoreceptive zones (AP) - osmoreceptive zones (OVLT) Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition planchnic Circulation /IV blood flow through GIT including liver and pancreas blood flow through spleen Main functional roles: - metabolic function of GIT - blood reservoir - special {e.g. spleen - removal and degradation of old/altered erythrocytes) planchnic Circulation • Blood reservoir • at rest -20% of the total blood volume • rich innervation with sympathetic vasoconstrictive fibers - a rec. (even 350 ml of the blood emptied into the systemic circulation during several minutes!) planchnic Circulation Intestinal circulation (a. coeliaca, a. mesenterica superior and inferior) submucous plexus, branches enter musculature and intestinal villi countercurrent exchange of substances Simple columnar epithelium Lacteal Capillary network Goblet cells ntestinal crypt Lymph vessel Arteriole Venule Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition z planchnic Circulation • Intestinal circulation (a. coeliaca, a. mesenterica superior and inferior) • Regulation of blood flow: - metabolic vasodilation (mediators: adenosine, j [K+]e and t osmolarity) - neural regulation - almost exclusively sympathicus, a > ß rec. ->• vasoconstriction planchnic Circulation • Hepatic circulation (v. portae, a. hepatica) • 25% of the cardiac output (~1.5 l/min) - % v. portae, Va a. hepatica • portal circulation - 2 capillary bloodstreams in series (intestinal villi, liver sinusoids) - i 02 content -> a. hepatica represents the nutritive hepatic circulation Regarding 02 supply, the ratio is opposite! planchnic Circulation Hepatic circulation {v. portae, a. hepatica) functional unit - acinus Sinusoids Bile canaliculi Bile duct Branch of the hepatic artery Branch of the portal vein Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Z planchnic Circulation Hepatic circulation (v. portae, a. hepatica) pressures: - a. hepatica: - v. hepatica: - v. portae: - sinusoids: Sinusoids 90 mmHg 5 mmHg 10 mmHg 2.25 mmHg Bile canaliculi Bile duct Branch of the hepatic artery Branch of the portal vein Central vein Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition As/ lr. „-v z planchnic Circulation • Hepatic circulation (v. portae, a. hepatica) • inverse regulation of blood flow in v. portae and a. hepatica: - between meals: many sinusoids collapsed, flow in v. portae low, adenosine formed constantly and washed less -> dilation of terminal hepatic arterioles - after a meal: flow in v. portae t, adenosine washed faster -»• constriction of hepatic arterioles, higher flow in v. portae opens so far collapsed sinusoids • increased hepatic pressure (cirhosis) -» ascites • Hepatic circulation (v. portae, a. hepatica) • Regulation of blood flow: - neural: symp. vasoconstrictive fibers - a rec. - metabolic: adenosine -» vasodilation - passive: t BP -» passive dilation of portal vein radicles -» t 'iver blood amount congestive heart failure diffuse noradrenergic discharge due to l BP • sufficient 02supply is essential for liver function! -1 flow -» t 02 extraction /Ä\ planchnic Circulation • Hepatic circulation (v. portae, a. hepatica) • hepatic lymphatic circulation - formation of almost % of the body lymph - lymph rich on proteins (many plasmatic proteins are formed in hepatocytes + proteins from plasma due to the high permeability of sinusoids) etal Circulation /IV Left atriu Superior vena cava 62°/c o Ductus arteriosus Foramen ovale placenta, umbilical vein liver, ductus venosus crista dividens, foramen ovale blood supply of the head and upper limbs v. cava superior and inferior the right ventricle ductus arteriosus aorta - the blood supply of the lower part of body + 60% of the cardiac output is directed to placenta Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Pulmonary artery Left ventricle To placenta etal Circulation Left atrium Superior vena cava Foramen ovale Portal vein Umbilical vein From placental. To placenta Ductus arteriosus Changes after birth Closure of umbilical vein - sudden t of peripheral resistance and blood pressure - contraction of musculature of ductus venosus and its closure The first inspiration (due to asphyxia and cooling of the body) - I resistance of the lung bloodstream - much more blood into lungs Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Pulmonary artery Left ventricle etal Circulation Changes after birth Decrease of pressure in right atrium and its increase in left atrium due to: - t filling of left atrium by the blood from lungs - I venous return to right atrium due to closure of umbilical vein Left atrium Superior vena cava Foramen ovale Ductus arteriosus Portal vein Umbilical vein A - left ventricle works against t pressure in aorta Closure of formanen ovale Closure of ductus arteriosus _ Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition Pulmonary artery Left ventricle From placental. To placenta z irculation /IV ena irculation main functions of kidneys High filtration rate requires an adequate blood supply! - kidneys form only -0.4 % of the body weight - blood flow 1.2 l/min, -25% of cardiac output distribution of blood flow is irregular, the most flows through cortex (glomeruli - filtration) Renal Circulation Cortical radiate vein Cortical radiate artery Arcuate vein Arcuate artery Interlobar vein Interlobar artery Segmental arteries Renal vein Renal artery Renal pelvis Ureter Renal medulla Renal cortex (a) Frontal section illustrating major blood vessels O 2013 Pearson Education, inc. Aorta Renal artery Segmental artery Interlobar artery I Arcuate artery Cortical radiate artery i" Afferent arteriole Inferior vena cava Renal vein Interlobar vein í -+- Arcuate vein í Cortical radiate vein 4- Peritubular capillaries -or vasa recta Efferent arteriole Glomerulus (capillaries) J aries)-1 Nephron-associated blood vessels (see Figure 25,7) (b) Path of blood flow through renal blood vessels if. http://classes.midlandstech.edu/carterp/Courses/bio211/chap25/cha z Aj/ Cortical nephron - Short nephron Joop - Glomerulus further from the cortex-medulla junction * Efferent arteriole supplies peritubular capillaries Juxtamedullary nephron - Long nephron loop - Glomerulus closer to the corlexrrnedulla junction • Efferent arteriole supplies vasa recta ©2013 Pearson Education. Inc. http://classes.midlandstech.edu/carterp/Courses/bio211/chap25/chap25.htm v. aff., v. eff. Bowman's capsule pressure (18 mm Hg) glomerular blood flow = P - P 1 v.a. 1 v.e. Guy ton & Hall. Textbook of Medical Physiology RV.a. + Rv.e. + • t resistance in vas aff. or vas eff. -» i the renal blood flow (if the arterial pressure is stable) * regulate the glomerular filtration pressure: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ constriction of vas aff. -> I glomerular pressure -> I filtration constriction of vas eff. ->■ t glomerular pressure ->• t filtration -^ enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 1) Myogenic autoregulation 2) Neural regulation 3) Humoral regulation enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 1) Myogenic autoregulation - dominates - provides stable renal filtration activity by maintaining stable blood flow at varying systemic blood pressure enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 2) Neural regulation - conformed to demands of systemic circulation - sympathetic system - norepinephrine light exertion/upright body posture -> t sympathetic tone ->• t tone of v. aff. and eff. -» I renal blood flow but without I GFR (t FF) higher t of sympathetic tone - during anesthesia and pain - GFR may already I enal Circulation » Regulation of renal blood flow: 3) Humoral Regulation - contribute to regulation of systemic BP and regulation of body fluids - NE, E (from the adrenal medulla) constriction of aff. and eff. arterioles ->• 4- renal blood flow and GFR (small impact with the exception of serious conditions, for example serious bleeding) enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 3) Humoral Regulation - contribute to regulation of systemic BP and regulation of body fluids - endothelin constriction of aff. and eff. arterioles -»• I renal blood flow and GFR released locally from the impaired endothel (physiological impact - hemostasis; pathologically increased levels at the toxemia of pregnancy acute renal failure, chronic uremia) l.)yf^ enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 3) Humoral Regulation - contribute to regulation of systemic BP and regulation of body fluids - NO continual basal production -»vasodilation stable renal blood flow and GFR - prostanglandins (PGE2, PGI2), bradykinin ->• vasodilation minor impact under physiological conditions non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents during stress! enal Circulation • Regulation of renal blood flow: 3) Humoral regulation - contribute to regulation of systemic BP and regulation of body fluids - Renin-angiotensine system Ganong's Review of Medical Physiology, 23rd edition