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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

Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)

Figure: Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)

Three-panel illustration covering Starling forces at the capillary (filtration and reabsorption), types of capillaries (continuous, fenestrated, sinusoidal), and regional circulations (coronary, cerebral, splanchnic) with their unique regulatory mechanisms.
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.

Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)

Figure: Microcirculation and Regional Circulations (PY5.12, PY5.13)

Two-panel figure. Panel A: Starling forces at the capillary showing hydrostatic and oncotic pressures at the arteriolar and venular ends, with net filtration and absorption arrows. Panel B: Bar chart or schematic of regional blood flow distribution at rest — coronary, cerebral, splanchnic, renal, skeletal muscle, skin — showing mL/min and percentage of cardiac output.

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

Cardiovascular Responses to Exercise and Posture (PY5.14)

Figure: Cardiovascular Responses to Exercise and Posture (PY5.14)

Two-panel illustration showing cardiovascular responses to exercise (cardiac output increase, blood flow redistribution from rest to maximal exercise) and postural changes (orthostatic response with baroreceptor compensation).
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?

  1. 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.
  1. 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).
  1. 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.
  1. 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

Shock — When Blood Pressure Fails (PY5.15)

Figure: Shock — When Blood Pressure Fails (PY5.15)

Three-panel illustration showing the four types of shock (hypovolaemic, cardiogenic, distributive, obstructive) with simplified circuit diagrams, compensatory mechanisms, and the three stages of shock progression.
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):

  1. 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.
  1. Cardiogenic shock — the heart fails as a pump. Causes: massive MI (loss of >40% of myocardium), severe arrhythmias, acute valvular regurgitation. Mortality: 70-80%.
  1. 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).
  1. 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.