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A. Increased venous return, increased stroke volume
Decreased venous capacitance means venoconstriction has occurred. Venoconstriction
causes less blood to be held on the venous side and increases venous return to the
heart. This would increase preload and increase stroke volume
Decreased venous capacitance or compliance would cause which of the following:
A. Increased venous return, increased stroke volume
B. Increased venous return, decreased mean arterial pressure
C. Decreased venous return, decreased volume
D. Increased right atrial pressure, decreased mean arterial pressure
Third spacing is excess fluid filtration into the interstitial space that is picked up by the
lymphatics leading to edema. This can be attributed mostly to a high Pc (capillary
hydrostatic pressure) that favors filtration out of the capillary and due to a decreased
capillary oncotic pressure that could be related to a lack of proteins that means less is
absorbed into the capillaries.
You could also see heart failure related to increased filtration out of the capillaries.
Arteriolar dilation leads to venous constriction and increased venous pressure d/t
volume expansion.
What is the biggest player of Starling Forces related to "third spacing" and why? What
other clinical symptoms could you see with this?
Jv = Kf (Pc + interstitial oncotic pressure - capillary oncotic pressure - Pi)
Jv = 12(20 + 6 - 15 - 2) Jv
= 108
Given the values below, what is the fluid flux?
Kf = 12
Pi = 2
Pc = 20
interstitial oncotic pressure = 6 capillary
oncotic pressure = 15
This is describing the myogenic mechanism that is used to explain autoregulation, or the
intrinsic ability of blood vessels to detect changes
, If the blood vessels are too rigid or don't have tension, autoregulation is not good
What does this process describe? What would impede this?
When the driving pressure increases the vessel is stretched. Intrinsic properties of the
vessel detect the change and cause smooth muscle contraction -> reduced radius of
vessel -> increases resistance and prevents a rise in blood flow.
B. Prostaglandin is an agonist of vasodilation
E. Epinephrine is an agonist of vasodilation and binds the beta-2-receptor (GPCR)
adenylyl cyclase that increases cAMP and reduces the Ca sensitivity of contractile
mechanisms
Which two of these are not an agonist of vasoconstriction?
A. Serotonin
B. Prostaglandin
C. Angiotensin II
D. Endothelin
E. Epinephrine
A. Heat generating mechanisms like activating motor nerves on skeletal muscle
You are an EMT and you come to a call where a patient has fallen into a pool in the
dead of winter. What physiological process is occurring in his body to maintain his core
temperature at "set point" when his hypothalamus senses its deviation below normal?
A. Heat generating mechanisms like activating motor nerves on skeletal muscle
B. Heat generating mechanisms like decreasing thyroid hormone production
C. Heat generating mechanisms like water evaporating off of the body
D. Heat dissipating mechanisms like peripheral vasodilation
B. Heat stroke caused by severe tissue damage due to impaired heat dissipating
mechanisms
You are working in the ED and your patient works on construction sites during the
middle of the summer. He is normally sure to drink plenty of fluids but today, the hottest
day on record in Oklahoma, he does not have any water or Gatorade. What are you
most likely treating him for right now in your ED after he lost consciousness on site after
complaining of a terrible headache?
A. Heat exhaustion due to loss of blood volume from excessive sweating
B. Heat stroke caused by severe tissue damage due to impaired heat dissipating
mechanisms
C. Heat exhaustion caused by abnormally regulated Ca channels