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PY5.1-16 | Cardiovascular Physiology — Part 4
SELF-CHECK
A normal ECG shows a PR interval of 0.24 seconds. All other findings are normal (P before every QRS, QRS after every P, QRS < 0.12 s, rate 68 bpm). What is the likely diagnosis?
A. Normal sinus rhythm
B. First-degree AV block
C. Second-degree AV block (Mobitz type I)
D. Atrial fibrillation
Reveal Answer
Answer: B. First-degree AV block
The PR interval is prolonged (>0.20 s = >1 large square), but every P wave is followed by a QRS — this is first-degree AV block. It represents delayed conduction through the AV node. It is usually benign and doesn't need treatment. In second-degree block, some P waves would NOT be followed by QRS complexes. In atrial fibrillation, there would be no P waves at all.
Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)
Regional Circulations — Key Features
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Regional Circulations — Key Features
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Regional Circulations — Key Features
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Regional Circulations — Key Features
Figure: Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Regional Circulations — Key Features
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Regional Circulations — Key Features
| Circulation | Blood Flow (% of CO) | Key Regulator | Unique Feature | Clinical Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coronary | 5% (~250 mL/min) | Adenosine (metabolic) | Highest O2 extraction (~70%); flow mainly in diastole | Subendocardial ischaemia in coronary artery disease |
| Cerebral | 15% (~750 mL/min) | CO2 / pH (metabolic) | Autoregulation (MAP 60-150 mmHg); blood-brain barrier | Stroke if MAP falls below autoregulatory range |
| Splanchnic | 25% (~1250 mL/min) | Local metabolites | Portal circulation; postprandial hyperaemia | Mesenteric ischaemia in shock (blood diverted away) |
Before understanding what goes wrong in shock and heart failure, we need to understand where the actual exchange of nutrients and waste occurs — the microcirculation.
Figure: Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)
The capillary: the functional unit of the circulation. Total length of all capillaries: ~96,000 km. Wall is a single layer of endothelial cells — thin enough for diffusion.
Starling forces govern capillary exchange:
Fluid movement depends on the balance of 4 pressures:
• Capillary hydrostatic pressure (Pc) — pushes fluid OUT (arteriolar end ~35 mmHg, venular end ~15 mmHg)
• Interstitial hydrostatic pressure (Pi) — pushes fluid IN (slightly negative, ~-3 mmHg)
• Plasma oncotic pressure (pi-p) — pulls fluid IN (~25 mmHg, due to albumin)
• Interstitial oncotic pressure (pi-i) — pulls fluid OUT (~8 mmHg)
At the arteriolar end: net filtration pressure = (35 + 3 + 8) - 25 = +21 mmHg -> fluid moves OUT.
At the venular end: net absorption pressure = (15 + 3 + 8) - 25 = +1 mmHg -> slightly OUT, but mostly balanced. Excess interstitial fluid is drained by lymphatics.
Oedema occurs when fluid accumulates in the interstitium: increased Pc (heart failure, venous obstruction), decreased pi-p (nephrotic syndrome, liver cirrhosis — low albumin), increased capillary permeability (inflammation, burns), lymphatic obstruction (filariasis, post-surgical).
Regional circulations (PY5.13):
• Coronary circulation — 250 mL/min at rest (5% of CO). Flow occurs mainly during DIASTOLE (systolic compression occludes intramural vessels). Metabolic autoregulation is dominant — adenosine is the key vasodilator.
• Cerebral circulation — 750 mL/min (15% of CO). Autoregulation maintains constant flow between MAP 60-150 mmHg. CO2 is the most potent cerebral vasodilator.
• Splanchnic circulation — 1400 mL/min (25% of CO). Acts as a blood reservoir; sympathetic stimulation redistributes blood away from the gut during exercise or shock.
Cardiovascular Responses to Exercise and Posture (PY5.14)
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
Figure: Cardiovascular Responses to Exercise and Posture (PY5.14)
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart Rate | 72 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.6x |
| Stroke Volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac Output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 Consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Total Peripheral Resistance | Normal | Decreased (muscle vasodilation) | Decreased |
| Skeletal Muscle Blood Flow | 20% of CO | 85% of CO | ~20x absolute |
Exercise — the ultimate cardiovascular stress test:
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart rate | 70 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.7x |
| Stroke volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Skeletal muscle blood flow | 1000 mL/min (20%) | 12500 mL/min (80%) | ~12.5x |
| Splanchnic blood flow | 1400 mL/min | 300 mL/min | ~0.2x (decreased) |
| Total peripheral resistance | Normal | Markedly decreased | Decreased |
Cardiovascular Parameters: Rest vs Maximal Exercise
| Parameter | Rest | Maximal Exercise | Fold Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heart rate | 70 bpm | 190 bpm | ~2.7x |
| Stroke volume | 70 mL | 120 mL | ~1.7x |
| Cardiac output | 5 L/min | 25 L/min | ~5x |
| O2 consumption | 250 mL/min | 3000 mL/min | ~12x |
| Systolic BP | 120 mmHg | 200 mmHg | ~1.7x |
| Diastolic BP | 80 mmHg | 80 mmHg (unchanged) | 1x |
| Skeletal muscle blood flow | 1000 mL/min (20%) | 12500 mL/min (80%) | ~12.5x |
| Splanchnic blood flow | 1400 mL/min | 300 mL/min | ~0.2x (decreased) |
| Total peripheral resistance | Normal | Markedly decreased | Decreased |
During maximal exercise, the cardiovascular system must increase oxygen delivery from ~250 mL/min (rest) to ~3,000 mL/min (maximal exercise) — a 12-fold increase.
How does the body achieve this?
- Cardiac output increases — from ~5 L/min to ~25 L/min (5-fold). Both HR (up to ~190 bpm in a young adult) and stroke volume (from ~70 mL to ~120 mL via Frank-Starling mechanism + increased contractility) increase.
- Blood flow is redistributed — skeletal muscle blood flow increases from ~1 L/min to ~20 L/min (20-fold!). Coronary and cerebral flow also increase. Blood flow to the gut, kidneys, and skin DECREASES (sympathetic vasoconstriction redirects blood to working muscles).
- Peripheral resistance decreases — local vasodilation in working muscles (metabolites: K+, adenosine, CO2, lactic acid) overwhelms the sympathetic vasoconstriction elsewhere. Net result: TPR falls, which allows the increased CO to flow through without excessive BP rise.
- Blood pressure changes — SBP increases significantly (to ~200 mmHg during heavy exercise), but DBP stays the same or slightly decreases (because TPR falls). Pulse pressure widens.
Postural changes:
On standing, ~500 mL of blood shifts to the lower limbs due to gravity -> venous return decreases -> CO drops transiently -> baroreceptor reflex compensates within seconds (increased HR, vasoconstriction). Orthostatic (postural) hypotension = a fall of >20 mmHg systolic or >10 mmHg diastolic within 3 minutes of standing. Causes: dehydration, autonomic neuropathy (diabetic patients), drugs (antihypertensives, diuretics), elderly.
Shock — When Blood Pressure Fails (PY5.15)
Types of Shock — Comparison
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Types of Shock — Comparison
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Types of Shock — Comparison
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Types of Shock — Comparison
Figure: Shock — When Blood Pressure Fails (PY5.15)
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Types of Shock — Comparison
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Types of Shock — Comparison
| Type | Problem | Common Causes | CO | SVR | Key Sign |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage, dehydration, burns | Decreased | Increased | Cold, clammy skin; collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI, cardiomyopathy | Decreased | Increased | Raised JVP, pulmonary oedema |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis, anaphylaxis, spinal injury | Increased (early) | Decreased | Warm, flushed skin (early); bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction | PE, tamponade, tension pneumothorax | Decreased | Increased | Distended neck veins, pulsus paradoxus |
Shock is a state of inadequate tissue perfusion — cells don't get enough oxygen and nutrients. It is NOT simply 'low blood pressure' — BP may be initially normal due to compensatory mechanisms.
Types of Shock — Classification and Key Features
| Type | Primary Defect | Common Causes (India-relevant) | CVP | Cardiac Output | TPR | Key Clinical Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage (road accidents, obstetric), dehydration (cholera, gastroenteritis), burns | Low | Low | High | Tachycardia, cold clammy skin, collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI (>40% LV loss), acute myocarditis | High | Low | High | Pulmonary oedema, raised JVP, gallop rhythm |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis (puerperal, neonatal), anaphylaxis | Low/Normal | High (early) / Low (late) | Low | Warm flushed skin (early), fever, bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction to filling/output | Cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, massive PE | High | Low | High | Pulsus paradoxus (tamponade), tracheal deviation (pneumothorax) |
| Neurogenic | Loss of sympathetic tone | Spinal cord injury above T6 | Low | Low/Normal | Low | Bradycardia + hypotension (unlike other shock types) |
Types of Shock — Classification and Key Features
| Type | Primary Defect | Common Causes (India-relevant) | CVP | Cardiac Output | TPR | Key Clinical Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hypovolaemic | Reduced blood volume | Haemorrhage (road accidents, obstetric), dehydration (cholera, gastroenteritis), burns | Low | Low | High | Tachycardia, cold clammy skin, collapsed veins |
| Cardiogenic | Pump failure | Massive MI (>40% LV loss), acute myocarditis | High | Low | High | Pulmonary oedema, raised JVP, gallop rhythm |
| Distributive (Septic) | Massive vasodilation | Sepsis (puerperal, neonatal), anaphylaxis | Low/Normal | High (early) / Low (late) | Low | Warm flushed skin (early), fever, bounding pulse |
| Obstructive | Mechanical obstruction to filling/output | Cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, massive PE | High | Low | High | Pulsus paradoxus (tamponade), tracheal deviation (pneumothorax) |
| Neurogenic | Loss of sympathetic tone | Spinal cord injury above T6 | Low | Low/Normal | Low | Bradycardia + hypotension (unlike other shock types) |
Types of shock (classified by cause):
- Hypovolaemic shock — reduced blood volume. Causes: haemorrhage (most common in India — road accidents, obstetric haemorrhage), dehydration (cholera, severe gastroenteritis), burns (plasma loss). This is the most common type in India.
- Cardiogenic shock — the heart fails as a pump. Causes: massive MI (loss of >40% of myocardium), severe arrhythmias, acute valvular regurgitation. Mortality: 70-80%.
- Distributive shock — widespread vasodilation reduces effective circulating volume. Subtypes: septic shock (most common in ICU), anaphylactic shock (acute allergic reaction), neurogenic shock (spinal cord injury causing loss of sympathetic tone).
- Obstructive shock — physical obstruction to blood flow. Causes: cardiac tamponade, tension pneumothorax, massive pulmonary embolism.
Compensatory mechanisms (why BP may be initially normal):
1. Baroreceptor reflex -> tachycardia, vasoconstriction
2. Sympathetic discharge -> catecholamines -> increased HR, contractility, vasoconstriction
3. RAAS activation -> angiotensin II (vasoconstriction) + aldosterone (Na+/water retention)
4. ADH release -> water retention + vasoconstriction
5. Capillary fluid shift -> reduced Pc draws interstitial fluid into capillaries ('autotransfusion')
Stages of shock:
• Compensated — BP maintained by above mechanisms. Patient is tachycardic, cool, clammy (peripheral vasoconstriction), anxious. Urine output decreasing.
• Decompensated (progressive) — mechanisms overwhelmed. BP drops. Tachycardia worsens. Lactic acidosis (anaerobic metabolism). Oliguria.
• Irreversible — cellular death. Multi-organ failure. No response to treatment. Fatal.