Role of the Capillaries
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In addition to forming the connection between
the arteries and veins, capillaries have a vital role in the
exchange of gases, nutrients, and metabolic waste products
between the blood and the tissue cells. Substances pass through
the capillaries wall by diffusion, filtration, and osmosis.
Oxygen and carbon dioxide move across the capillary wall by
diffusion. Fluid movement across a
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capillary wall is determined by a combination of hydrostatic and
osmotic pressure. The net result of the capillary microcirculation
created by hydrostatic and osmotic pressure is that substances leave
the blood at one end of the capillary and return at the other end.
Blood Flow
Blood flow refers to the movement of blood through the vessels
from arteries to the capillaries and then into the veins. Pressure
is a measure of the force that the blood exerts against the vessel
walls as it moves the blood through the vessels. Like all fluids,
blood flows from a high pressure area to a region with lower pressure.
Blood flows in the same direction as the decreasing pressure gradient:
arteries to capillaries to veins.
The rate, or velocity, of blood flow varies inversely with the
total cross-sectional area of the blood vessels. As the total cross-sectional
area of the vessels increases, the velocity of flow decreases. Blood
flow is slowest in the capillaries, which allows time for exchange
of gases and nutrients.
Resistance is a force that opposes the flow of a fluid. In blood
vessels, most of the resistance is due to vessel diameter. As vessel
diameter decreases, the resistance increases and blood flow decreases.
Very little pressure remains by the time blood leaves the capillaries
and enters the venules. Blood flow through the veins is not the
direct result of ventricular contraction. Instead, venous return
depends on skeletal muscle action, respiratory movements, and constriction
of smooth muscle in venous walls.
Pulse and Blood Pressure
Pulse refers to the rhythmic expansion of an artery that is caused
by ejection of blood from the ventricle. It can be felt where an
artery is close to the surface and rests on something firm.
In common usage, the term blood pressure refers to arterial blood
pressure, the pressure in the aorta and its branches. Systolic pressure
is due to ventricular contraction. Diastolic pressure occurs during
cardiac relaxation. Pulse pressure is the difference between systolic
pressure and diastolic
pressure. Blood pressure is measured with
a sphygmomanometer and is recorded as the systolic pressure
over the diastolic pressure. Four major factors interact to
affect blood pressure: cardiac output, blood volume, peripheral
resistance, and viscosity.
When these factors increase, blood pressure also increases.
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Arterial blood pressure is maintained within normal ranges by changes
in cardiac output and peripheral resistance. Pressure receptors
(barareceptors), located in the walls of the large arteries in the
thorax and neck, are important for short-term blood pressure regulation.
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