Components of Map
Short or Long term?
Clinical Application
Good or Bad MAP?
Wild Cards
100

Which nervous system controls  heart rate

(Bonus if you can say where in the brain heart rate is controlled)

Autonomic Nervous System 

(Medulla Oblongata) 

100

What type of receptors detect the stretch in the arteries and are involved in maintaining MAP

Baroreceptors

100

Which patient is more at risk for poor organ perfusion? Patient A: 120/80, Patient B: 100/50

 B

100

You stand up suddenly and get a head rush. Is this positive or negative MAP in that moment? Why?

Negative. A temporary drop leads to less brain perfusion

100

Where is professor Atrill from?

Tasmania

200

Define Cardiac Output

what is a measurement of the amount of blood pumped by each ventricle in a minute

200

In the RASS System what is the purpose of renin and where can it be found?

In the blood stream and its main purpose is to convert the protein angiotensinogen to angiotensin I.

200

A patient is given a vasodilator drug. Explain how this affects MAP and why

MAP decreases because total peripheral resistance drops

200

You just finished a workout and experience a flushed face, warm skin, and heavy breathing. Is this positive or negative MAP in that moment? Why?

 Positive. MAP is being maintained and blood flow is reaching muscles.



200

What molecule does tissue perfusion deliver to support cell metabolism?

Oxygen

300

What is perfusion

What is the movement of blood in the tissues

(this is what MAP maintains)

300

This vascular response lowers total peripheral resistance and helps decrease mean arterial pressure after elevated baroreceptor firing.


What is vasodilation?

300

If systolic pressure increases significantly but diastolic stays the same, why doesn’t MAP increase proportionally?

Diastole has a larger influence
300

If you are sitting and talking normally but feel like you might pass out when you close your eyes, is your MAP likely normal, low, or on the edge? Why?

Right on the edge. You are still conscious, meaning that perfusion isn’t completely failing, but the symptom suggests cerebral perfusion isn’t fully adequate.

300

In grade three which animal did professor Atrill bring to class

A Sheep

400
What is TPR and explain some of the key vascular features that determine it.

Compliance - the ability of any compartment to expand to accommodate increased content.

Blood volume - hypovolemia, hypervolemia

Blood viscosity - the thickness of fluids that affects their ability to flow.

Blood vessel length - does not typically change in adults, but increases as we grow

Blood vessel diameter - can be altered by vasoconstriction (narrowing) or vasodilation (widening)

400

In RAAS, the kidneys initiate the response, the lungs provide ACE activity, the adrenal glands release aldosterone, and this gland releases ADH.

What is the pituitary gland

400

A patient comes into the ER after not drinking water all day at a music festival. They’re dizzy, tired, and complain about feeling “off”. What is happening physiologically?

Low blood volume causes low cardiac output, decreased MAP, and reduced perfusion, causing symptoms.

400

A system has steady pressure, but only operates properly when external assistance is constantly pushing fluid. Is this good or bad MAP? Why?

Bad. MAP isn’t being maintained independently and could collapse without the assistance.

400

As the aortic valve opens and closes, describe how the ventricles respond during systole and diastole.


When the aortic valve opens, the ventricles are in systole and actively contracting to eject blood into the aorta. When the aortic valve closes, the ventricles begin diastole, relax, and ventricular pressure falls so the chambers can eventually fill again.



500

List the three components of stroke volume and briefly explain each.

What is: Preload, Contractility and Afterload

Preload:How full is the heart prior to contraction. Similar to end diastolic volume.

Contractility - the force of the contraction of the heart muscle. This is the main determinant of ESV, and therefore, impacts SV.

Afterload - to the tension that the ventricles must develop to pump blood effectively against the resistance in the vascular system.

500

This is the most direct reason angiotensin II can restore MAP faster than aldosterone can, even though both are activated in the same pathway.

What is that angiotensin II directly causes vasoconstriction, while aldosterone works more slowly through renal sodium and water retention?

500

Two patients walk into the ER. One looks flushed, warm, and relaxed. The other looks pale, cold, and tense. Both patients have the same MAP. Who worries you more, and why?

The cold, pale patient. Their body is likely using vasoconstriction to maintain MAP, which can reduce actual blood flow to tissues.

500

In situation A, water flows slowly but evenly through every pipe in a system. In situation B, water pressure is high, but most pipes are tightly narrowed. Which situation represents a better MAP state? Why?

A. narrow pipes can lead to poor flow that reduces complete perfusion.

500

Bonus Question worth 1000 (must be answered in the last minute): What sparked Professor Atrill's interest in human physiology

attending the Rotary National Science and Technology Forum in New Zealand