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Hemodynamics and Blood Flow

Hemodynamics and Blood Flow

Hemodynamics and Blood Flow

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Basic Hemodynamics - Flow's ABCs

  • Blood Flow (Q): Volume/time (L/min). $Q \propto \Delta P$, $Q \propto 1/R$.
  • Pressure Gradient ($\Delta P$): Pressure difference driving flow (High P → Low P).
  • Resistance (R): Opposition to flow.
  • Ohm's Law for Flow: $Q = \Delta P / R$.
    • ↑ $\Delta P$ or ↓ R → ↑ Q.
  • Poiseuille's Law for Resistance: $R = (8 \eta L) / (\pi r^4)$
    • $\eta$: Viscosity (↑ $\eta$ → ↑ R).
    • L: Vessel Length (↑ L → ↑ R).
    • r: Vessel Radius (most critical; $R \propto 1/r^4$). Poiseuille's Law factors affecting blood flow

⭐ Vessel radius ($r$) is paramount: halving $r$ increases resistance 16x and reduces flow 16x (if $\Delta P$ constant), due to the $r^4$ factor in Poiseuille's law.

Vascular Resistance - Poiseuille's Power Play

  • Poiseuille's Law quantifies vascular resistance: $R = \frac{8 \eta L}{\pi r^4}$.
    • $R$: Resistance
    • $\eta$: Blood viscosity (e.g., polycythemia $\uparrow \eta \uparrow R$)
    • $L$: Vessel length (relatively constant)
    • $r$: Vessel radius (paramount factor)
  • Resistance dynamics:
    • Directly proportional to viscosity ($\eta$) and length ($L$).
    • Inversely proportional to radius to the fourth power ($r^4$).
      • 📌 $r^4$ Dominance: Small radius change $\rightarrow$ massive resistance change. E.g., halving radius $\uparrow$ resistance 16x. Poiseuille's Law and Blood Flow in Artery
  • Arterioles are the principal sites of systemic vascular resistance (SVR) regulation. ⭐ > Arterioles, through vasodilation and vasoconstriction, exert the most significant control over Total Peripheral Resistance (TPR), directly impacting blood pressure.

Blood Flow Patterns - Smooth or Shaky Show

  • Laminar Flow:
    • Smooth, silent, layered (parabolic velocity profile: fastest at center).
    • Normal physiological flow; energy efficient.
  • Turbulent Flow:
    • Disordered, noisy (e.g., murmurs, bruits).
    • Causes: High velocity (stenosis, high output states), ↓ blood viscosity (anemia), large vessel diameter, vessel branching.
    • Energy inefficient; ↑ endothelial stress.
  • Reynolds Number ($Re$):
    • Predicts flow pattern: $Re = \frac{\rho v D}{\eta}$ (where $\rho$=density, $v$=velocity, $D$=diameter, $\eta$=viscosity).
    • Laminar flow: $Re < \textbf{2000}$.
    • Turbulent flow: $Re > \textbf{3000}$.

⭐ Audible bruits often indicate turbulent flow, which can predispose to endothelial damage and atheroma formation, particularly at vessel bifurcations. Laminar vs. Turbulent Blood Flow

Vessel Dynamics & Control - Stretch, Squeeze, Survive

  • Vascular Properties:
    • Compliance ($C = \Delta V / \Delta P$): Ability to distend. Veins (high capacitance) > Arteries.
    • Elasticity: Ability to recoil. Arteries (maintain diastolic pressure) > Veins.
    • Stress-relaxation & Reverse stress-relaxation: Gradual adaptation to changes in blood volume/pressure.
  • Blood Flow Regulation:
    • Local (Autoregulation):
      • Myogenic: Stretch (↑pressure) → Vascular Smooth Muscle (VSM) contraction (Bayliss effect).
      • Metabolic: Vasodilators (e.g., ↓O₂, ↑CO₂, ↑H⁺, ↑K⁺, adenosine).
      • Endothelial: Nitric Oxide (NO) (potent vasodilator); Endothelin-1 (potent vasoconstrictor).
    • Neural:
      • Sympathetic α₁ receptors: Vasoconstriction (most arterioles).
      • Sympathetic β₂ receptors: Vasodilation (skeletal muscle, coronary arteries).
    • Hormonal:
      • Vasoconstrictors: Angiotensin II, Vasopressin (ADH).
      • Vasodilators: Atrial Natriuretic Peptide (ANP), Bradykinin.
      • Adrenaline: Dual effect (α₁ constrict, β₂ dilate).

⭐ Flow-mediated vasodilation, primarily via Nitric Oxide (NO) release from endothelium in response to shear stress, is a critical physiological mechanism.

Blood Flow Regulation Mechanisms

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Poiseuille's Law: Resistance is dominated by vessel radius (to the 4th power); radius ↓ by half, resistance16 times.
  • Ohm's Law for flow: Blood Flow equals Pressure Gradient divided by Resistance.
  • Velocity is slowest in capillaries (largest total cross-sectional area), aiding exchange.
  • Reynolds number predicts turbulent flow, which ↑ resistance and cardiac work.
  • Veins show high compliance (volume/pressure change), acting as blood reservoirs.
  • Mean Arterial Pressure (MAP approximately Diastolic + one-third Pulse Pressure) is key for tissue perfusion.

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