Lecture 4 Cardiovascular System 2
Lecture 4 Cardiovascular System 2
Lecture 4 Cardiovascular System 2
PHYSIOLOGY I
Tunica Media
Smooth muscle & elastic fiber
layer regulation by
sympathetic nervous system
results in vasoconstriction
and vasodilation
1.Elastic Arteries
2.Muscular Arteries
3.Arterioles
ELASTIC OR CONDUCTING ARTERIES
• Elastic or Conducting
Arteries are thick-walled
arteries near the heart; the
aorta and its major
branches
- Low resistance
– Serve as pressure
reservoirs during systole
– Recoil during diastole to
keep blood moving
• Muscular arteries –
deliver blood to body
organs
– Less stretchy
– Active in
vasoconstriction
• Thickest media
• Tunica media – more
smooth muscle & less
elastic tissue
ARTERIOLES
• Arterioles are the smallest of the arteries
– transport blood from small arteries to the capillary beds.
– Capable of vasodilation and vasoconstriction.
• Larger arterioles have all 3 tunics
• Tunica media – smooth muscle with scattered elastic fibers
• Smaller arterioles – lead in capillary beds
- consist of a single layer of smooth muscle cells surround
endothelial lining.
CAPILLARIES
• Exceptions:
– Tendons and ligaments
– Cartilage
– Cornea
– Lens
– Epithelial tissues
STRUCTURE OF CAPILLARIES
• Capillaries are the smallest blood
vessels
– Walls consisting of a thin tunica
interna, one cell thick
– Allow only a single RBC to pass
at a time
– Pericytes on the outer surface
stabilize their walls
• Function:
– Gas exchange
– Nutrients
– Hormones
– Ions
– Others
TYPES OF CAPILLARIES
1.Continuous
2.Fenestrated
3.Sinusoids
CONTINUOUS CAPILLARIES
• Continuous capillaries most
abundant in the skin & muscles
– Least permeable, lack pores
– Endothelial cells provide an
uninterrupted lining
– Adjacent cells are connected
with tight junctions
– Intercellular clefts allow the
passage of fluids
– Endothelium contains
pinocytotic vesicles
True capillaries
Branch off metarteriole & return to
thoroughfare channnel.
Precapillary spinchter
Cuff of smooth muscle fiber
Acts as valve to regulate blood flow in the
capillary
Veins are:
– Formed when venules converge
– Composed of three tunics, tunica intima w/ a thin tunica media and a
thick tunica externa consisting of collagen fibers & elastic networks
– Capacitance vessels (blood reservoirs), contain 60% of the blood
– Much lower blood pressure and thinner walls than arteries
– Have special adaptations to return blood to the heart:
– Large-diameter lumens, which offer little resistance to flow
– Valves (resembling semilunar heart valves), which prevent
backflow of blood, form from folds of tunica intima.
VENOUS SYSTEM
• Arterial BP reflects 2
factors of the arteries
close to the heart
– Their elasticity
(compliance or
distensibility)
– The amount of blood
forced into them at any
given time
• Blood pressure in elastic
arteries near the heart is
pulsatile (BP rises and falls
ARTERIAL BLOOD PRESSURE
Requires…..
Baroreceptors
in carotid
sinuses and
aortic arch Inhibit CO
stimulated vasomotor center
R
Rate of vasomotor
Arterial impulses allows
blood pressure vasodilation CO and R
rises above ( vessel diameter) return blood
normal range pressure to
Homeostatic
Stimulus: range
Rising blood
pressure
Vasomotor Stimulate
fibers vasomotor
stimulate center
vasoconstriction
Short-Term Mechanisms: Chemical Control
• Consequences if persist –
cells die & organ damage
(REF: Marieb EN, Hoehn K. Human Anatomy & Physiology 7th Edition. Chap
19: Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels from pg 747 & 759)