Title: Biology 2672a: Comparative Animal Physiology
1Biology 2672a Comparative Animal Physiology
- Circulation II
- Regulation of Circulation
2What happens in the systemic circuit?
3The Systemic circuit
- Blood is delivering oxygen and nutrients and
picking up waste products (and delivering them to
the kidneys) - Organs muscles
- Linear flow rate is reduced
- Cross-sectional area increases
4Major Arteries
- Muscular, elastic thick walls (smooth muscle and
elastin) - Pressure of 10-20 kPa
- Elastic
- Dampen pressure differences
- Store some elastic energy
- e.g. Aorta, carotid artery, femoral artery
- 16/10 kPa
5Terminal arteries
6Arteriole 8/3.5 kPa
Capillaries c. 2.5-3 kPa
Venules c. 1.3-2 kPa
Right ventricle then increases pressure to c. 1.9
kPa for passage through lungs
Fig. 24.11
7- Precapillary sphincter
- Can close off flow to capillary bed
- Arteriolar-venular anasomosis
- Allows blood to bypass the capillary bed
Fig. 23.11
8Veins
- Low pressure
- Have a system of one-way valves
- Much thinner-walled than arteries
9Pressure drop across vascular system
Fig. 24.12b
10What about birds?
- Broadly similar
- Heart pumps more and faster to meet greater
oxygen demands - Higher pressures
11What about birds?
12Gravity also affects pressure
Acceleration due to gravity
?P ?g?h
Height difference across the system
Fluid density (mercurygtseawatergtwatergtoil)
See Fig 24.7
13The problem of being a giraffe
- The brain of a standing giraffe is 2m above its
heart - To maintain a pressure of c. 13 kPa in brain
arteries, needs an aortic pressure of c. 29 kPa
(!)
14- Tight skin on legs
- Muscular arteries
- High interstitial fluid pressure, efficient
return of venous blood
15Giraffes have a drinking problem
?P ?g?h
- Very high pressure blood into brain
- Blood can pool in brain
16Solving the giraffe drinking problem
- Vasodilation in lower body reduces blood pressure
- Elastic arteries near brain absorb some increased
pressure - One-way valves in jugular vein prevent backflow
of blood into head
17Brain
Need blood flow to be maintained
Heart
Kidneys Require a regulated blood pressure to
function
18Animals with a closed circulatory system are able
to regulate
- Where blood goes
- How much of it goes there
- Need to respond to central requirements
- e.g. fight-or-flight
- Also need to respond to local conditions
- O2 demand, localised damage
19How to regulate blood flow?
Change tube diameter
Change Energy input
20Energy input Cardiac Output
Can be modulated by both endocrine and nervous
systems
stroke volume
Cardiac Output
heart rate
Modulated by nervous activity (via
norepinephrine) and circulating epinephrine
(adrenaline)
Equation 24.1
21Myogenic autoregulation (stretch response)
Increased blood flow
Increased pressure on arteriole wall
Smooth muscle stretched
Decreased blood flow
Smooth muscle contracts
Increased resistance
22Neural control of vasoconstriction
- Sympathetic nervous system can be activated to
induce vasoconstriction - Thermoregulation
- Fight or flight
- Mediated by Norepinephrine released by
sympathetic neurons
23Neural Regulation of vasomotor tone
- sympathetic nerves
- noradrenaline smooth muscle
- ????? receptors
- ? constriction
- ? dilation
- Relative receptor population density
24Smooth Muscle Cell
Viagra inhibits cGMP breakdown
NO Produced
25Endocrine control of vasomotor tone
- Epinephrine (Adrenaline) from Adrenal medulla
induces vasodilation - Fight or flight
- Vasopressin (ADH) Angiotensin II
vasoconstriction - Activate Adrenergic receptors on smooth muscle
- Not necessarily mediated by nerves
26Paracrine control of vasomotor tone
- NO
- Produced by endothelial cells to maintain
vasomotor tone in response to hormonal cues - Same mechanism as for parasympathetic activation
- Nitroglycerine
- Also responses to local factors indicating
hypoxia and damage
27Local regulation
- Hormonal
- Adrenaline (Epinephrine)
- ????? receptors
- Local Control
- low O2, pH, ATP
- high CO2, K
- dilates vessels locally
- override neural hormonal control
Fig. 23.11
28Reading for Tuesday
- Intro to Gas Exchange breathing in water
- pp 533-560