You are on page 1of 7

Ch.

4 Blood Flow and Metabolism

Right Ventricle Pulmonary Artery Terminal Bronchioles plexus capillaries

Pressures w/in Pulmonary BVs

Pressures in pulmonary circulation are remarkably low


Pulmonary artery 15mm Hg (systolic 25mmHg; diastolic 8 mmHg)
Pressure @ inlet 10 mmHg; pressure @ outlet ~100 mmHg
Pulmonary vasculature contain very little SM
o Responsible for accepting 100% of CO
o Rarely concerned with directing flow keeps Rt. Heart small
Pressures usually b/t 12 mm Hg and 8 mm Hg

Pressures around Pulmonary BVs

Pulmonary capillaries are virtually surrounded by gas


If alveolar pressure >> capillary pressure collapse occurs
Transmural pressure (Pin Pout) for capillary to NOT collapse P TM >> PA
o In other wordsas long as transmural pressure is positive collapse is
prevented; and if transmural pressure (w/in the cap) becomes negative
collapse will occur (( d/t pressure of alveoli on the capillary))
Both pulmonary arteries and veins increase their pressure (w/in) during
inspiration
o Large BVs (i.e. pulmonary artery) extra-alveolar vessels includes
arteries and veins that run through the lung parenchyma
Caliber/diameter is greatly affected by lung volume b/c this
determines the expanding pull of the parenchyma on their walls
Very large vessels near the hilum are outside of the lung
substance and are exposed to intrapleural pressure
o Small BVs (i.e. capillaries) alveolar vessels
Caliber/diameter determined by the relationship b/t alveolar
pressure and pressure inside (i.e. Transmural pressure)
Summary of Alveolar and Extra-Alveolar Vessels
o Alveolar vessels are exposed to alveolar pressure and are compressed
if this increases (again, if Transmural pressure 0 and then negative;
collapse occurs)
o Extra-alveolar vessels are exposed to a pressure less than alveolar,
and are pulled open by the radial traction of the surrounding
parenchyma

Pulmonary Vascular Resistance

Vascular resistance = (input pressure output pressure) / blood flow

Pressure drop across pulmonary vasculature ~ 10 mm Hg; therefore


pulmonary vascular resistance is about 1/10 th of systemic
Pulmonary blood flow = 6 L/min
Pulmonary vascular resistance = (15-5) / 6 ~= 1.7 mm Hg/(1/L)/min
Pulmonary resistance decreases as pressure increases
o Why?
o 1) Recruitment: under normal conditions, some caps are either closed,
or open but receive little or no blood flow (i.e. apex of lung) --- as
pressure rises, these vessels begin to conduct blood, thus lowering the
overall resistance (i.e. in parallel)
Chief mech. For the fall in pulm. Vascular resistance that occurs
as the pulmonary artery pressure is raised from low levels
o 2) distension: at higher capillary pressures, distension occurs
(vasodilation)
Predominant mechanism for the fall in pulmonary vascular
resistance at relatively high vascular pressures
Remember: a positive transmural pressure = distending
pressure (i.e. how you prevent collapse of trachea on expi w/
large drop in pressure in airways)cartilage provides the
increase in transmural pressure b/t airway (pressure forcing
expansion) and lungs (pressures promoting collapse)
o 3) lung volume: capillaries are pulled open as the lung expands
vascular resistance is low at large lung volumes
Also, the capillaries have a high resistance when lung volumes
are low (i.e. max expi or at FRC, or RV)
Critical opening pressure amt. of pressure that pulmonary
artery must provide for collapsed vessels Pressure to be equal
and opp. To pleural pressure
(i.e. restore a positive transmural(distending pressure) once a
negative transmural pressure/collapse has occured
Lung Volume
o EPP (equal potential pressure) or Critical opening pressure
o EPP occurs where the pressure in the capillary is equal to the pressure
in the alveolus
o If EPP occurs within the lower airways collapse of vessel occurs
o The vessel cannot be openend until the pressure of the capillary
becomes equal to or greater than the pressure w/in the alveolus
critical opening pressure (see animation)
o Even if the pressure in the caps is not changed w/ large lung inflations
(inspi), the capillaries resistance increases
o Drugs that cause contraction of pulmonary vessels (i.e. Beta 2 agonist
albuterol, ach, isoproterenol) cause contraction of the SM
increasing pulmonary vascular resistance (i.e. increasing flow)
Serotonin, histamine, norepipotent vasoconstrictors
Prostacyclin potent vasodilator
o Summary of Pulmonary Vascular Resistance
It is normally very small
Decreases on exercise b/c of recruitment and distention
of capillaries
Increases at high and low lung volumes
Increases with alveolar hypoxia b/c of constriction of
small pulmonary arteries

Measurement of Pulmonary Blood Flow

Fick principle:
o The O2 consumption per minute (dot VO2) is equal to the amt. of O2
taken up by the blood in the lungs per minute
o B/c the O2 concentration in the blood entering the lungs is C(line)VO2
and blood leaving is CaO2 :
(dot)Q ((Perfusion)) = Ventilation of O2 / (Concentration of
arterial O2 Concentration of blood entering the lungs)
Q = VO2 / (CaO2 CVO2)

Distribution of blood Flow


Blood flow decreases linearly from bottom to top, reaching very low perfusion
values at the apex
Distribution of blood is dependent on posture and exercise
Supine position: apical zone blood flow increases, but the basal zone flow
remains unchanged
Uneven blood flow is d/t hydrostatic pressure differences w/in bvs.
o Zone 1 aka Alveolar Dead Space
PA > Pa > PV
where pulmonary arterial pressure falls below alveolar
pressure capillary collapse (negative PTM)
normally doesnt occur b/c the pulmonary arterial pressure is
sufficient to raise blood to top of the lung but may occur if
arterial pressure drops (i.e. hemorrhage) or if alveolar pressure
is raised (i.e. positive ventilation)

o Zone 2
Pa > PA > Pv
Pulmonary arterial pressure >> alveolar pressure
Venous pressure << alveolar pressure
Blood flow is determined by the difference b/t arterial and
alveolar pressures
o Zone 3
Pa > PV > PA
Venous pressure exceeds alveolar pressure
Transmural pressure is positive throughout length of tube
Mean width increases
Recruitment can increase blood flow in this zone
o Zone 4
Region of reduced blood flow, occurs when lung is poorly inflated
At low lung volumes, the resistance of extra-alveolar vessels
becomes important, and a reduction of regional blood flow is
seen starting at base
General Blood Flow: Periphery << Central regions

Active Control of Circulation

Importance:
o Effect of directing blood flow away from hypoxic regions of the lung
( i.e. d/t obstruction)
o Assist in matching V/Q ratio (i.e. ventilation to perfusion = 1/1
normally)
o Occurs at high altitude
Hypoxic pulmonary Vasoconstriction PAO2 is reduced
Occurs when PAO2 << 70 mm Hg (normal PA/aO2 = 100 mm Hg)
o Contraction of SM in the walls of the small arterioles in the hypoxic
region
o Not dependent on CNS connections
o Vasoconstriction is determined by: PAO2
Decreased PAO2 Inhibition of voltage gated K+
channels Increased cytoplasmic Ca++ SM
contraction Increased pulmonary vascular resistance
o Fetal
Relatively low oxygen
High pulmonary resistance
First Breath removes hypoxic vasoconstriction
Increased O2
Decreased pulmonary vascular resistance
o NO mech.
Block NO increase Hypoxic Vasoconstriction
Adm. NO reduce hypoxic vasoconstriction (20mm usually,
lethal at high doses)
NO is created from L-arginine via catalysis by eNOS
NO activates cyclic GMP SM relaxation

o Pulmonary endothelial vasoconstrictors
Endothelin-1 (ET-1)
Thromboxane A2 (TXA2)
o Other causes of vasoconstriction:
Decreased pH (i.e. anaerobic metab.)
Increased sympathetic activity
Hypoxic Pulmonary Vasoconstriction
o Alveolar hypoxia constricts small pulmonary arteries
o Probably a direct effect of the low PaO2 on vascular smooth
muscle
o Critical at birth in the transition from placental to air breathing
o Directs blood flow away from poorly ventilated areas of the
diseased lung in the adult
o PAO2 of 100 mm Hg = 80 % flow (normal)
o PAO2 of 50 mm Hg = 40% flow (vasoconstriction)
o PAO2 of 150 mm Hg = 90% flow (i.e. adm NO)

Water Balance in the Lung

Distance b/t capillary blood from alveolar air = 0.3 m


Fluid exchange across capillary endothelium obeys Starlings law
o Force tending to push fluid out of the capillary is hydrostatic pressure
minus the hydrostatic pressure of the interstitial fluid ( P C Pi)
o Force tending to pull fluid in is the osmotic pressure of the proteins of
the blood minus that of the proteins of the interstitial fluid ( C i)
o is the effectiveness of the capillary wall in preventing the passage
of proteins across it; termed reflection coefficient
o K = filtration coefficient
o Net fluid out = K[(PC Pi) (C i)
o Capillary osmotic pressure ~ 28 mm Hg
o Colloid osmotic pressure of interstitial fluid ~ 20 mm Hg
o Net result: outward Pressure causes about 20ml/hr to diffuse from
capillary into interstitium
Where does the fluid go?
o Fluid which leaks out into the interstitium of the alveolar wall tracks
through the interstitial space to the perivascular and peribronchial
space w/in the lung
Numerous lymphatics brings this fluid to hilar lymph nodes
o Interstitial edema -- Earliest form of pulmonary edema is characterized
by engorgement of the peribronchial and perivascular spaces
o Later stage of pulmonary edema fluid may cross the alveolar
epithelium into the alveolar spaces
Alveoli fill w/ fluid one by one, and b/c they are unventilated
no diffusion occurs (i.e. no oxygenation & no removal of CO2)
o Fluid that reaches the alveolar spaces is actively pumped out by
Na+,K+, and ATPase pumps in epithelial cells
o Seriousness: alveolar edema >>>> interstitial edema

Other Functions of the Pulmonary Circulation (see Ch.1 summary)

Acts as reservoir of blood


Ability to reduce pulmonary vascular resistance as its vascular pressures are
raised through: recruitment and distension
o Same mechanism allows lung to increase its blood volume w/ relatively
small rises in pulmonary arterial or venous pressures. (i.e. change in
posture from standing supine)
Blood then drains from legs lung
Acts as a filter for blood
o Small thrombi are removed from the circulation before they can reach
the brain or other vital organs
o Traps WBCs (fx unknown)

Metabolic Functions of the Lung

See chart Ch.1 summary


Activated in lung:
o Vasoconstrictors:
Angiotensin I angiotensin II
Angiotensin II has NO effect on the lung vasculature itself
(i.e. effects systemic vasculature)
ACE located in small pits on surface of capillary
endothelial cells
Inactivated in lung:
o ACE
o Vasodilators:
Bradykinin (80% inactivated)
o Uptake and storage of serotonin (almost completely removed)
o PGE1, PGE2, PGF2
o NE
o Histamine
Arachadonic acid and Metabolites released in blood
o Membrane-bound phospholipid
o Phospholipase A2
o Arachidonic Acid
o Lipoxygenase Cyclooxygenase
o Leukotrienes Prostaglandins, thromboxane A2
Prostaglandins are potent vasodilators and vasoconstrictors
o PGE2 relaxes patent ductus arteriosus
o Also effects kallikrein-kinin clotting cascade
o Asthma?
Misc:
o Mast cells containing heparin in interstitium
o IgA antibiotic defense
o Synthesis of surfactant by type II pneumocytes
o Leukocytes cause of emphysema via breakdown of elastin and
fibrin?
o Carbohydrate metabolism (via mucopolysaccharides in mucus)

You might also like