| Term 
 
        | What ANS receptors are found on arterioles, and which type of receptor is found where in the body? |  | Definition 
 
        | Alpha-1 adrenergic Rs are found on skin, splanchnic and renal circulations (divert blood flow away from less vital organs when fight-or-flight). Beta-2 Rs on skeletal muscle vessels (increase blood flow to muscles).
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        | Term 
 
        | Velocity of blood flow equation |  | Definition 
 
        | V = Q/A Q = blood flow (mL/min)
 A = cross-sectional area (cm^2)
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Q = delta-P/R delta-P = pressure gradient (mmHg)
 R = resistance (mmHg/mL/min)
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        | Term 
 
        | Calculating cardiac output from resistance and pressure values |  | Definition 
 
        | CO = (MAP - RAP) / TPR MAP = mean arterial pressure
 RAP = right atrial pressure
 TPR = total peripheral resistance
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | 2/3 diastolic pressure + 1/3 systolic pressure |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Poiseulle's equation (factors that affect resistance) |  | Definition 
 
        | R = 8(η)l / πr^4 η = viscosity
 l = length of blood vessel
 r = radius
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        | Term 
 
        | Adding parallel resistances |  | Definition 
 
        | The reciprocal of the total resistance is the sum of the reciprocal of individual resistances. |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Adding series resistances |  | Definition 
 
        | The total resistance is the sum of individual resistances. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Determines whether blood flow will be laminar (organized flow in a straight line) or turbulent (causes audible vibrations called bruits). It is increased (along with turbulence) by increases in blood velocity (i.e. vessel narrowing) or decreases in viscosity (anemia, decreased hematocrit). |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Blood flow is fastest in the center of a blood vessel and slowest at the wall, thus this type of stress is highest at the vessel wall. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Describes the distensibility of blood vessels: C = V/P (mL/mmHg)
 V = volume (mL)
 P = pressure (mmHg)
 Higher for veins (unstressed volume) than arteries so that much more blood volume is contained in them than in the arteries.
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Represents atrial depolarization (repolarization is buried within the QRS complex). |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Represents AV nodal conduction, and is increased in cases of slower conduction (as in heart block). Sympathetic stimulation increases velocity and therefore decreases this interval (and vice versa for parasympathetic. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Represents depolarization of ventricles. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Represents both ventricular depolarization and repolarization. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Represents the period when ventricles are depolarized and thus is isoelectric. |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Fast (ventricular) action potential |  | Definition 
 
        | Atria, ventricles and Purkinje system. Phase 0 = upstroke, increase of Na conductance
 Phase 1 = slight repolarization, decrease in Na conductance and outward K current
 Phase 2 = plateau, transient increase in Ca inward current balanced by outward K current.
 Phase 3 = repolarization, Ca conductance decreases and K outward current dominates.
 Phase 4 = resting membrane potential, inward and outward currents are balanced, membrane potential approaches K equilibrium potential.
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        | Term 
 
        | Slow (pacemaker) action potential |  | Definition 
 
        | SA and AV nodes. Phase 0 = depolarization due to inward Ca current
 Phase 3 = repolarization with K current
 Phase 4 = slow depolarization (automaticity) due to inward Na current that is activated by repolarization during the previous AP.
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        | Term 
 
        | Order of pacemakers in the heart |  | Definition 
 
        | SA node > AV node > His-Purkinje. If the SA node is suppressed the latent pacemakers may take over if they are faster. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Affects time required for excitation to spread through heart. Fastest in Purkinje system, slowest at AV node (in order to allow ventricular filling before contraction). |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Absolute = no AP can be initiated Effective = slightly longer than absolute, APs cannot be propagated
 Relative = larger than usual stimulus is required to elicit an AP
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        | Term 
 
        | Dromotropic vs. Chronotropic effects |  | Definition 
 
        | Dromotropy refers to changes in conduction velocity while chronotropy refers to changes in heart rate. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Vagal nerve releases ACh onto muscarinic receptors. Negative chronotropic results from decreased Phase 4 Na current.
 Negative dromotropic results from decrease Ca current and increased K current (slows conduction and increases PR interval length)
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Norepi acts on beta-1 receptors. Positive chronotropic results from increased Phase 4 Na current.
 Positive dromotropic results from increased Ca current.
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | End-diastolic volume (which is related to right atrial pressure). Determines stretching of ventricular walls before contraction. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Aortic pressure (left ventricle) or Pulmonary arterial pressure (right ventricle). |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Changes in ventricular pressure volume loops: Increased Preload |  | Definition 
 
        | Right boundary of loop extends to the right, as the ventricle is being filled more than usual. |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Changes in ventricular pressure volume loops: Increased Afterload |  | Definition 
 
        | Top boundary of loop extends upward while left boundary shifts to the right. Ventricle has to pump against a higher aortic pressure so less volume is pumped out. |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Changes in ventricular pressure volume loops: Increased Contractility |  | Definition 
 
        | Left boundary of loop shifts left; more blood is being pumped out but pressure values remain the same. |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Volume ejected from the ventricle on each beat, SV = EDV - ESV |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | SW = Aortic pressure x SV |  | 
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