Arteries & Veins
Capillaries
Movement
Issues
Other
100

The 4 types of arteries.

What are conducting arteries, distributing arteries, resistance arteries, and metarterioles (arterioles).

100

The purpose of capillaries.

What is the location of gas, nutrient, waste, and hormone exchange between blood and tissues.

100

The definition of blood flow.

What is the amount of blood flowing through an organ, tissue, or blood vessel at a given time.

100

Explain an aneurysm

The weak part in an artery or heart wall which bursts. Can cause a hemorrhage. Results from congenital weakness of blood vessels, or bacterial infections.

100

What are the three layers of veins and arteries (from outside to inside)

Tunica externa -- connective tissue

Tunica media -- smooth muscle, collagen, elastic tissue

Tunica interna -- simple squamous

200

The purpose of metarterioles.

What is the linking of arterioles directly to venules in order to bypass capillary beds.

200

The capillary that occurs in most tissue, has tight junctions and pericytes, which aids in solute passage and regulation of blood flow.

What are continuous capillaries.

200

The 3 variables that control blood pressure.

cardiac output

blood volume

resistance to flow (peripheral resistance)

200
when cardiac output is insufficient to meet metabolic needs it is called ________.

What is circulatory shock.

200

Chemoreceptors

In the carotid body and aortic arch

monitor blood chemistry and adjust respiration rate in response to pH and CO2/O2 concentrations

glossopharyngeal -- carotid bodies

vagus-- aortic bodies

300

The veins with valves.

What are medium veins.
300

Fenestrated Capillaries are found here for this purpose.

What are organs that require rapid absorption, that allow for the passage of small molecules but not proteins, through their fenestrations. 

300
The greatest contributor to decrease in blood flow through these characteristics.

arterioles through more muscular, outnumber other arteries, on proximal side of beds, blood has travelled greater distance, and increased resistance.

300

Causes of Edema.

What are increased capillary filtration, reduced capillary reabsorption, and obstructed lymphatic drainage.

Bonus: Explain why each would cause edema. (100pts)

300

Baroreceptors

In the carotid sinus

monitor BP and activate mechanoreceptors

work through nerves signaling increase BP due to stretch of arterial wall exposing stretch receptors (PIEZO channel), leading to ions entering and depolarization

400

What are the 5 types of veins.

What are large veins, venous sinuses, medium veins, muscular venule, and postcapillary venules.

400
Vessels fount in only the bone marrow and spleen with irregular spaces that allow albumin, clotting factors, and blood cells through.

What are sinusoids?

400

The mechanisms of movement through capillary walls.

What is diffusion

transcytosis

filtration/ reabsorption

Bonus (100pts): explain filtration and reabsorption.

400

Explain transient ischemic attacks.

Brief episodes of cerebral ischemia caused by the spasm of diseased cerebral arteries. Causes dizziness, vision loss, weakness, paralysis, headache, and aphasia. Often a warning sign of an impending stroke.

400

Why must astronauts and fighter pilots where pressurized pants?

venous pressure is not enough to force blood upwards and so the blood pools in the lower extremities leading to vascular shock.

500

List the main differences between veins and arteries.(flow, capacity, structure)

Arteries: Maintain round shape, resilient, pulsatile, high pressure.

Veins: thin walled and flaccid, collapse when empty, steady flow, low pressure.

500

What are capillary beds?

networks of capillaries that are supplied by a single artery or metarteriole which drain into a metarteriole or venule. The flow into them is controlled by precapillary sphincters.


Are they all open, all of the time?

500

The way that venous return works.

pressure gradient

gravity

skeletal muscle pump

thoracic pump

cardiac suction

500

Name each type of low venous return shock and explain it.

Hypovolemic

obstructed venous return 

venous pooling (vascular) 

septic from infection causing hypovolemic and vascular shock

anaphylactic due to a reaction resulting in hypovolemic and vascular shock

500

How does the brain monitor its own perfusion

By monitoring pH from dissolved CO2 in the blood.


Hypercapnia triggers vasodilation and increases heart rate/ resp rate

Hypocapnia triggers vasoconstriction and decreases heart rate/ resp rate