Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

During ventricular systole, the stroke volume ejected by the ventricle results in some forward capillary flow, but most of the ejected volume is stored.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "During ventricular systole, the stroke volume ejected by the ventricle results in some forward capillary flow, but most of the ejected volume is stored."— Presentation transcript:

1 During ventricular systole, the stroke volume ejected by the ventricle results in some forward capillary flow, but most of the ejected volume is stored in the elastic arteries. During ventricular diastole, the elastic recoil of the arterial walls maintains capillary flow through the remainder of the cardiac cycle. Accordingly, pulse pressure is proportional to stroke volume, and diastolic pressure increases with peripheral resistance, heart rate, and vascular capacitance, all of which reduce the diastolic runoff of the ejected volume. (Reproduced with permission from Berne RM, Levy MN (eds): Physiology. St. Louis, Mosby, 1988, p 487.) Source: Chapter 20. The Pathophysiology of the Circulation in Critical Illness, Principles of Critical Care, 3e Citation: Hall JB, Schmidt GA, Wood LH. Principles of Critical Care, 3e; 2005 Available at: Accessed: December 31, 2017 Copyright © 2017 McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved


Download ppt "During ventricular systole, the stroke volume ejected by the ventricle results in some forward capillary flow, but most of the ejected volume is stored."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google