E N D
1. CIRCULATORY SYSTEM BLOOD VESSELS
2. CIRCULATORY SYSTEM BLOOD
HEART
BLOOD VESSELS
3. BLOOD VESSELS ARTERIES
CARRY BLOOD FROM THE HEART
ARTERY ? ARTERIOLES ? CAPILLARIES
CAPILLARIES
SITE OF GAS AND NUTRIENT EXCHANGE
VEINS
RETURN BLOOD TO THE HEART
CAPILLARIES ? VENULES ? VEINS
5. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS THREE LAYERS (TUNICS)
TUNICA EXTERNA (OUTERMOST)
TUNICA MEDIA
TUNICA INTERNA (INNERMOST)
7. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS TUNICA EXTERNA
OUTERMOST LAYER
LOOSE CONNECTIVE TISSUE
MERGES WITH ADJACENT CONNECTIVE TISSUES
ANCHORS VESSEL
PASSAGE FOR NERVES, BLOOD & LYMPH VESSELS
8. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS TUNICA EXTERNA
NOURISHMENT
OUTER HALF NOURISHED BY SMALL BLOOD VESSELS (VASA VASORUM)
INNER HALF NOURISHED BY DIFFUSION FROM BLOOD IN LUMEN
9. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS TUNICA MEDIA
MIDDLE LAYER
GENERALLY THE THICKEST LAYER
SMOOTH MUSCLE
VASOCONSTRICTION & VASODILATION
COLLAGEN
SOMETIMES ELASTIC TISSUE
10. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS TUNICA INTERNA
SMOOTH INNER LAYER
EXPOSED TO BLOOD
SQUAMOUS ENDOTHELIUM (EPI)
BASEMENT MEMBRANE
FIBROUS TISSUE
11. ARTERY AND VEIN WALLS TUNICA INTERNA
REPELS BLOOD CELLS (& PLATELETS)
SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE BARRIER TO BLOOD SOLUTES
SECRETES VASOCONSTRICTORS & VASODILATORS
12. ARTERIES MUST WITHSTAND PRESSURE
MORE MUSCULAR THAN VEINS
ROUND IN CROSS SECTION
THREE SIZE CATEGORIES
CONDUCTING (ELASTIC) ARTERIES
DISTRIBUTING (MUSCULAR) ARTERIES
RESISTANCE (SMALL) ARTERIES
13. ARTERIES CONDUCTING (ELASTIC) ARTERIES
LARGEST ARTERIES
E.G., AORTA, PULMONARY ARTERIES
TUNICA MEDIA
NUMEROUS ALTERNATING THIN LAYERS OF
PERFORATED ELASTIC TISSUE
SMOOTH MUSCLE, COLLAGEN, AND ELASTIC FIBERS
EXPAND DURING SYSTOLE
RECOIL DURING DIASTOLE
MINIMIZES DOWNSTREAM PRESSURE FLUCTUATIONS
15. ARTERIES DISTRIBUTING (ELASTIC) ARTERIES
SMALLER BRANCHES
E.G., BRACHIAL & FEMORAL ARTERIES
FURTHER FROM THE HEART
25 – 40 SMOOTH MUSCLE LAYERS
75% OF WALL THICKNESS
17. ARTERIES RESISTANCE (SMALL) ARTERIES
MAINLY UNNAMED
UP TO 25 SMOOTH MUSCLE LAYERS
LITTLE ELASTIC TISSUE
SMALLEST ARE ARTERIOLES
1-3 LAYERS OF SMOOTH MUSCLES
40 – 200 mM DIAMETER
19. ARTERIES METARTERIOLES
SHORT VESSELS LINKING ARTERIOLES AND CAPILLARIES
TUNICA MEDIA DISCONTINUOUS
MUSCLE CELLS FORM PRECAPILLARY SPHINCTER
ENCIRCLES CAPILLARY ENTRANCE
REGULATES MOVEMENT OF BLOOD INTO CAPILLARIES
20. CAPILLARIES CENTRAL TO CIRCULATORY SYSTEM
SITE OF EXCHANGE BETWEEN BLOOD AND TISSUES
SMALLEST BLOOD VESSELS
ENDOTHELIUM ONLY
THIN WALLS (0.2 mM – 0.4 mM)
5 – 9 mM DIAMETER (AVERAGE)
21. CAPILLARY STRUCTURE ~ BILLION IN BODY
HUGE COLLECTIVE SURFACE AREA
6,300 SQUARE METERS (M2)
> SIZE OF FOOTBALL FIELD
< 80 mM FROM ALMOST ALL CELLS
SOME EXCEPTIONS
E.G., TENDONS, LIGAMENTS, ETC.
ORGANIZED INTO CAPILLARY BEDS
22. CAPILLARY BEDS UNIT OF CAPILLARY ORGANIZATION
10 – 100 CAPILLARIES SUPPLIED BY SINGLE METARTERIOLE
THOROUGHFARE CHANNEL
ARTERIOLE ? VENULE
PRECAPILLARY SPHINCTER AT ENTRANCE TO EACH CAPILLARY
OPENED OR CLOSED
25. CAPILLARY BEDS BLOOD VOLUME
THERE IS NOT ENOUGH BLOOD TO FILL ALL BLOOD VESSELS SIMULTANEOUSLY
~75% OF THE BODY’S CAPILLARIES ARE CLOSED AT ANY GIVEN TIME
26. TYPES OF CAPILLARIES TWO TYPES OF CAPILLARIES
CONTINUOUS CAPILLARIES
FENESTRATED CAPILLARIES
27. TYPES OF CAPILLARIES CONTINUOUS CAPILLARIES
OCCUR IN MOST TISSUES
ENDOTHELIAL CELLS HELD TOGETHER BY TIGHT JUNCTIONS
FORM CONTINUOUS TUBE
INTERCELLULAR CLEFTS 4 nm WIDE
GLUCOSE, ETC. CAN PASS THROUGH
PLASMA PROTEINS, ETC. CANNOT
28. TYPES OF CAPILLARIES FENESTRATED CAPILLARIES
ALLOW RAPID ABSORPTION / FILTRATION
KIDNEYS, SMALL INTESTINE, ETC.
RIDDLED WITH HOLES
FENESTRATIONS / FILTRATION PORES
20 – 100 nm DIAMETER
USUALLY COVERED WITH DIAPHRAGM
RAPID PASSAGE OF SMALL MOLECULES
31. TYPES OF CAPILLARIES SINUSOIDS
IRREGULAR BLOOD-FILLED SPACES
BONE MARROW, SPLEEN, ETC.
SOME ARE CONTINUOUS CAPILLARIES
SOME ARE FENESTRATED CAPILLARIES
LARGE PORES
PROTEINS AND BLOOD CELLS CAN PASS THROUGH
ALBUMIN, CLOTTING FACTORS, RBCs, ETC.
32. VEINS CAPILLARIES ? VENULES ? VEINS
RETURN BLOOD TO THE HEART
FURTHER FROM THE HEART
LOWER BLOOD PRESSURE THAN ARTERIES
AVERAGE 10 mmHg VS. 100 mmHg
NEED NOT WITHSTAND HIGH PRESSURES
33. VEINS THINNER WALLS
LESS SMOOTH MUSCLE
LESS ELASTIC TISSUE
COLLAPSE WHEN EMPTY
EXPAND MORE EASILY
PRESSURE NOT HIGH ENOUGH TO RETURN BLOOD TO HEART
VENOUS VALVES AND MASSAGING ASSIST RETURN
35. VEINS VENULES
15 – 100 mM DIAMETER
PROXIMAL END POROUS
FLUID EXCHANGE WITH TISSUES
GAINS TUNICA MEDIA
SMOOTH MUSCLE SPARSE
TRIBUTARIES ? VEINS
36. VEINS VENOUS SINUSES
ESPECIALLY THIN WALLS
LARGE LUMENS
NO SMOOTH MUSCLE
E.G., CORONARY SINUS OF THE HEART
37. CIRCULATORY ROUTES HEART
?ARTERIES
? ARTERIOLES
?METARTERIOLES
?CAPILLARIES
?METARTERIOLES
?VENULES
?VEINS
?HEART
38. CIRCULATORY ROUTES TYPICAL CIRCULATORY ROUTE
HEART ? ARTERIES ? ARTERIOLES ? CAPILLARIES
CAPILLARIES ? VENULES ? VEINS ? HEART
USUALLY PASSES THROUGH SINGLE CAPILLARY BED
EXCEPTIONS?
39. CIRCULATORY ROUTES PORTAL SYSTEM
BLOOD FLOWS THROUGH TWO CONSECUTIVE CAPILLARY BEDS
E.G. KIDNEYS
40. CIRCULATORY ROUTES ANASTOMOSIS
TWO VESSELS (VEINS OR ARTERIES) MERGE WITH EACH OTHER
ARTERIOVENOUS ANASTOMOSIS
ARTERIAL ANASTOMOSIS
VENOUS ANASTOMOSIS
41. CIRCULATORY ROUTES ARTERIOVENOUS ANASTOMOSIS
SHUNT
ARTERY ? VEIN
BYPASSES CAPILLARIES
E.G. FINGERS, TOES, EARS, ETC.
REDUCE HEAT LOSS
MORE SUSCEPTIBLE TO FROSTBITE
42. CIRCULATORY ROUTES ARTERIAL ANASTOMOSIS
TWO ARTERIES MERGE
PROVIDE ALTERNATIVE ROUTES OF BLOOD SUPPLY TO A TISSUE
E.G. CORONARY CIRCULATION, AROUND JOINTS
43. CIRCULATORY ROUTES VENOUS ANASTOMOSIS
TWO VEINS MERGE
MORE COMMON
ALTERNATIVE ROUTS OF DRAINAGE FROM AN ORGAN
45. BLOOD FLOW AMOUNT OF BLOOD FLOWING THROUGH A TISSUE/ORGAN/VESSEL IN A GIVEN TIME
E.G., ML/MIN
SUPPLIES NUTRIENTS AND OXYGEN TO CELLS
REMOVES WASTES FROM CELLS
46. BLOOD FLOW PERFUSION
RATE OF BLOOD FLOW PER GIVEN MASS/VOLUME OF TISSUE
E.G., ML/MIN/G
47. BLOOD FLOW MUST KEEP PACE WITH METABOLIC RATE OF CELLS
NECROSIS (TISSUE DEATH)
TOTAL FLOW CONSTANT IN RESTING INDIVIDUAL
EQUAL TO CARDIAC OUTPUT
FLOW TO INDIVIDUAL ORGANS VARIES CONTINUALLY
48. BLOOD FLOW HEMODYNAMICS
PHYSICAL PRINCIPLES OF BLOOD FLOW
BASED UPON
PRESSURE DIFFERENCES (DP)
INCREASED PRESSURE DIFFERENCE ? INCREASED FLOW
RESISTANCE (R)
INCREASED RESISTANCE ? DECREASED FLOW
49. BLOOD PRESSURE EASILY MEASURED
SYSTOLIC PRESSURE
PEAK PRESSURE DURING SYSTOLE
DIASTOLIC PRESSURE
PRESSURE DURING DIASTOLE
PULSE PRESSURE
SYSTOLIC MINUS DIASTOLIC
MEASURE OF STRESS ON ARTERIES
50. BLOOD PRESSURE MEAN ARTERIAL PRESSURE (MAP)
AVERAGE OF CONTINUOUS READINGS
ESTIMATE
DIASTOLIC + 1/3 PULSE PRESSURE
AFFECTED BY GRAVITY
~62 mmHg IN HEAD
~180 mmHg IN ANKLES
51. BLOOD PRESSURE HYPERTENSION
CHRONIC RESTING BP > 140/90
CHRONIC, NOT TRANSIENT
CAN WEAKEN SMALL ARTERIES
ANEURYSMS
HYPOTENSION
CHRONIC LOW RESTING BP
RESULT OF ANEMIA, BLOOD LOSS, DEHYDRATION, ETC.
52. BLOOD PRESSURE ANEURYSM
WEAK POINT IN BLOOD VESSEL
PULSATES, MAY RUPTURE
PAIN, DEATH
RESULT FROM
CONGENITAL WEAKNESS
TRAUMA
INFECTIONS (E.G., SYPHILIS)
ATHEROSCLEROSIS AND HYPERTENSION
53. BLOOD PRESSURE ARTERIES DISTEND AND RECOIL
ABSORB SOME OF THE FORCE OF THE EJECTED BLOOD
REDUCE PRESSURE FLUCTUATIONS
MAINTAIN STEADY BLOOD FLOW
CONTINUOUS, YET PULSATILE
AORTA 120 CM/SEC SYSTOLE
AORTA 40 CM/SEC DIASTOLE
DOWNSTREAM B.P. & PRESSURE FLUCTUATIONS REDUCED
55. BLOOD PRESSURE EFFECTS OF AGING
INCREASE IN BLOOD PRESSURE
ARTERIES LESS DISTENDIBLE
ATHEROSCLEROSIS STIFFENS ARTERIES
56. RESISTANCE BLOOD PRESSURE AND RESISTANCE AFFECT EACH OTHER
BOTH BLOOD PRESSURE AND RESISTANCE AFFECT BLOOD FLOW
57. RESISTANCE PERIPHERAL RESISTANCE
RESISTANCE BLOOD ENCOUNTERS IN THE VESSELS
RESULTS FROM FRICTION AGAINST VESSEL WALLS
PROPORTIONAL TO THREE VARIABLES
BLOOD VISCOSITY
VESSEL LENGTH
VESSEL RADIUS
58. RESISTANCE VARIABLES AFFECTING RESISTANCE
BLOOD VISCOSITY
MAINLY DUE TO ERYTHROCYTES AND PLASMA PROTEINS
INCR VISCOSITY ? INCR RESISTANCE
59. RESISTANCE VARIABLES AFFECTING RESISTANCE
VESSEL LENGTH
FRICTION IS CUMULATIVE
INCR LENGTH ? INCR RESISTANCE
60. RESISTANCE VARIABLES AFFECTING RESISTANCE
VESSEL RADIUS
INNATE RADIUS DIFFERENCES
ALTERATIONS POSSIBLE
VASOCONSTRICTION (NARROWING)
VASODILATION (WIDENING)
INCREASED FRICTION NEAR VESSEL WALL
DECR RADIUS ? INCR RESISTANCE
61. RESISTANCE LAMINAR FLOW
BLOOD TRAVELS IN SHEETS
FASTER NEAR CENTER OF VESSEL
LESS FRICTION
SLOWER NEAR VESSEL WALLS
MORE FRICTION
SIMILAR TO WATER FLOW IN RIVERS
62. RESISTANCE LAMINAR FLOW
LARGER VESSELS
GREATER FRACTION OF BLOOD IN CENTER
SMALLER VESSELS
GREATER FRACTION OF BLOOD NEAR VESSEL WALLS
RESISTANCE = CONSTANT / RADIUS4
FLOW RATE = CONSTANT * RADIUS4
64. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY VASOCONSTRICTION
WIDESPREAD VASOCONSTRICTION
RESULTS IN INCREASE IN BP
RESULTS IN INCREASED PERFUSION
LOCALIZED VASOCONSTRICTION
INCREASES RESISTANCE IN AREA
REDIRECTS BLOOD FROM ONE ORGAN TO ANOTHER
67. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY LOCAL CONTROL
AUTOREGULATION
REACTIVE HYPEREMIA
VASOACTIVE CHEMICALS
ANGIOGENESIS
68. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY LOCAL CONTROL
AUTOREGULATION
INADEQUATE BLOOD FLOW
? BUILDUP OF WASTE PRODUCTS
? VASODILATION STIMULATED
? INCREASED BLOOD FLOW
69. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY LOCAL CONTROL
REACTIVE HYPEREMIA
BLOOD SUPPLY CUT OFF, THEN RESTORED
INCREASED BEYOND NORMAL LEVEL OF FLOW
E.G., AFTER COMING IN FROM COLD
POSSIBLY DUE TO BUILDUP OF WASTE PRODUCTS
70. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY LOCAL CONTROL
VASOACTIVE CHEMICALS
RELEASED BY PLATELETS, ENDOTHELIAL CELLS, ETC.
E.G., HISTAMINE
STIMULATES VASODILATION
E.G., PROSTACYCLIN
STIMULATES VASOCONSTRICTION
71. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY LOCAL CONTROL
ANGIOGENESIS
GROWTH OF NEW BLOOD VESSELS
LONG-TERM CHANGE
E.G. REGROWTH OF UTERINE LINING FOLLOWING MENSTRUATION
E.G., MUSCLES OF ATHLETES
E.G., ARTERIAL BYPASSES AROUND CORONARY OBSTRUCTIONS
72. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY NEURAL CONTROL
VASOMOTOR CENTER OF MEDULLA OBLONGATA
NERVE FIBERS
CAN STIMULATE VASOCONSTRICTION IN MOST BLOOD VESSELS
CAN STIMULATE VASODILATION IN CARDIAC AND SKELETAL MUSCLE
73. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY NEURAL CONTROL
THREE AUTONOMIC REFLEXES
BAROREFEXES
CHEMOREFLEXES
MEDULLARY ISCHEMIC REFLEXES
74. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY NEURAL CONTROL
BAROREFLEXES
RESPONSE TO D IN BLOOD PRESSURE
D DETECTED BY BARORECEPTORS
PRESENT IN AORTIC ARCH AND IN OTHER ARTERIES ABOVE HEART
NEGATIVE FEEDBACK RESPONSE
77. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY NEURAL CONTROL
CHEMOREFLEXES
RESPONSE TO D IN BLOOD CHEMISTRY
ESPECIALLY pH, [O2], [CO2]
D DETECTED BY CHEMORECEPTORS
PRESENT IN AORTIC ARCH AND IN OTHER ARTERIES ABOVE HEART
ADJUST RESPIRATION
STIMULATE VASOCONSTRICTION
INCREASE BP ? INCREASE PERFUSION
78. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY NEURAL CONTROL
MEDULLARY ISCHEMIC REFLEX
RESPONSE TO INADEQUATE PERFUSION IN BRAINSTEM
INCREASE HEART RATE & CONTRACTION FORCE
INDUCE WIDESPREAD VASOCONSTRICTION
INCREASE BP ? INCREASE PERFUSION
79. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY HORMONAL CONTROL
ANGIOTENSIN II
VASOCONSTRICTIVE HORMONE
INCREASE BP ? INCREASE PERFUSION
ANGIOTENSINOGEN ? ANGIOTENSIN I
CONVERSION STIMULATED BY RENIN
KIDNEYS PRODUCE RENIN IN RESPONSE TO LOW BP
ANGIOTENSIN I ? ANGIOTENSIN II
CONVERSION STIMULATED BY ACE (ENZYME)
ACE PRESENT IN LUNGS
ACE INHIBITORS TREAT HYPERTENSION
80. REGULATION OF BLOOD SUPPLY HORMONAL CONTROL
EPINEPHRINE / NOREPINEPHRINE
VASOACTIVE HORMONES
BIND TO a-ADRENERGIC RECEPTORS ON SMOOTH MUSCLE OF MOST BLOOD VESSELS
VASOCONSTRICTION
INCREASE BP ? INCREASE PERFUSION
BIND TO b-ADRENERGIC RECEPTORS ON BLOOD VESSELS OF SKELETAL MUSCLE AND CORONARY BLOOD VESSELS
VASODILATION
INCREASED BLOOD FLOW TO HEART & MUSCLES
81. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE CAPILLARIES
SITES OF EXCHANGE BETWEEN BLOOD AND SURROUNDING TISSUES
ROUTES OF EXCHANGE
PASSAGE THROUGH FENESTRATIONS
PASSAGE THROUGH INTERCELLULAR CLEFTS
PASAGE THROUGH ENDOTHELIAL CELL CYTOPLASM
83. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE MECHANISMS OF EXCHANGE
DIFFUSION
TRANSCYTOSIS
FILTRATION
REABSORPTION
84. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE DIFFUSION
MOST IMPORTANT MECHANISM
MOVEMENT DOWN CONC GRADIENT
IMPORTANT FOR
O2, CO2, STEROID HORMONES
THROUGH PLASMA MEMBRANE
GLUCOSE, ELECTROLYTES, ETC.
THROUGH CHANNELS / CLEFTS / FENESTRATIONS
NOT IMPORTANT FOR
PROTEINS, ETC. (TOO BIG)
85. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE TRANSCYTOSIS
MOVEMENT THROUGH EPITHELIAL CELLS
ENDOCYTOSIS, THEN EXOCYTOSIS
IMPORTANT FOR
FATTY ACIDS
ALBUMIN
SOME HORMONES (E.G., INSULIN)
86. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE FILTRATION
CAPILLARY PRESSURE
~30 mmHg AT ARTERIAL END
TISSUE PRESSURE
~-3 mmHg
FLUID LEAVES AT ARTERIAL END
REDUCED, BUT NOT PREVENTED BY ONCOTIC PRESSURE
87. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE ONCOTIC PRESSURE
TISSUE FLUID HAS FEWER SOLUTES THAN BLOOD
OSMOTIC FORCE PUSHING FLUID INTO CAPILLARIES
CANNOT OVERCOME PRESSURE DIFFERENCES AT ARTERIAL END OF CAP.
CAN OVERCOME PRESSURE DIFFERENCES AT VENOUS END OF CAPILLARIES
88. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE REABSORPTION
CAPILLARY PRESSURE
~ 10 mmHg AT VENOUS END
TISSUE PRESSURE
~-3 mmHg
ONCOTIC PRESSURE OVERWHELMS PRESSURE DIFFERENCE
FLUID ENTERS AT VENOUS END
90. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE FILTRATION AND REABSORPTION
FLUID LEAVES CAPILLARY AT ARTERIAL END
~85% OF FLUID REENTERS CAPILLARY AT VENOUS END
CAPILLARIES ARE LARGER AND MORE NUMEROUS AT VENOUS END
~15% REENTERS RETURNED VIA LYMPHATIC SYSTEM
91. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE EDEMA
EXCESS FLUID IN A TISSUE
ACCUMULATION CAUSED BY
INCREASED CAPILLARY FILTRATION
REDUCED CAPILLARY REABSORPTION
OBSTRUCTED LYMPHATIC DRAINAGE
92. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE CAUSES OF EDEMA
INCREASED CAPILLARY FILTRATION
CAUSES (E.G.)
INCREASED CAPILLARY B.P.
INCREASED CAPILLARY PERMEABILITY
CONGESTIVE HEART FAILURE
POOR VENOUS RETURN
INSUFFICIENT MUSCULAR ACTIVITY
KIDNEY FAILURE ? HYPERTENSION
93. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE CAUSES OF EDEMA
REDUCED CAPILLARY REABSORPTION
CAUSES (E.G.)
BLOOD ALBUMIN DEFICIENCY
REDUCED ONCOTIC PRESSURE
LIVER DISEASES (LESS ALBUMIN)
HYPOPROTEINEMIA (LESS ALBUMIN)
94. CAPILLARY EXCHANGE CAUSES OF EDEMA
OBSTRUCTED LYMPHATIC DRAINAGE
~15% OF FLUID LOST IS RETURNED VIA LYMPHATIC SYSTEM
OBSTRUCTION OR REMOVAL INTERFERES WITH THIS RETURN
95. VENOUS RETURN FLOW OF BLOOD BACK TO THE HEART
MECHANISMS OF VENOUS RETURN
PRESSURE GRADIENT
THORACIC (RESPIRATORY) PUMP
CARDIAC SUCTION
SKELETAL MUSCLE PUMP
GRAVITY
96. VENOUS RETURN PRESSURE GRADIENT
MOST IMPORTANT FORCE IN VENOUS RETURN
VENULE PRESSURE ~15 mmHg
VENA CAVAE PRESSURE ~ 4.6 mmHg
BLOOD FLOW TO THE HEART FAVORED BY DP
97. VENOUS RETURN THORACIC (RESPIRATORY) PUMP
INFERIOR VENA CAVA SPANS ABDOMINAL AND THORACIC CAVITIES
DURING INHALATION
THORACIC PRESSURE DROPS
ABDOMINAL PRESSURE INCREASES
FLOW OF BLOOD FROM ABDOMINAL TO THORACIC CAVITY PROMOTED
98. VENOUS RETURN CARDIAC SUCTION
DURING VENTRICULAR SYSTOLE
CHORDAE TENDINEAE PULL AV VALVE CUSPS TOWARD VENTRICLES
ATRIAL SPACE SLIGHTLY INCREASED
BLOOD DRAWN INTO ATRIA
99. VENOUS RETURN SKELETAL MUSCLE PUMP
VEINS SURROUNDED AND SQUEEZED BY SKELETAL MUSCLES
BLOOD SQUEEZED OUT
VALVES
SIMILAR TO SEMILUNAR VALVES
INSURE UNIDIRECTIONAL FLOW
101. VENOUS RETURN GRAVITY
BLOOD IN HEAD AND NECK SIMPLY FLOWS DOWNHILL
102. VENOUS RETURN EFFECTS OF EXERCISE
INCREASED CARDIAC OUTPUT
INCREASED BLOOD PRESSURE
BLOOD VESSEL DILATION
INCREASED FLOW RATE
INCREASED RESPIRATORY RATE
ENHANCED THORACIC PUMP
MUSCLE CONTRACTIONS
ENHANCED SKELETAL MUSCLE PUMP