1 / 90

Physiology of Coronary Blood Flow

Physiology of Coronary Blood Flow. Dr Sandeep Mohanan , Department of Cardiology, Medical College, Calicut. OUTLINE. Introduction Coronary microcirculation, resistance beds & autoregulation Endothelium dependent vasodilation CBF during exercise Physiology of CBF across a stenosis

sasson
Télécharger la présentation

Physiology of Coronary Blood Flow

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Physiology of Coronary Blood Flow Dr Sandeep Mohanan, Department of Cardiology, Medical College, Calicut.

  2. OUTLINE • Introduction • Coronary microcirculation, resistance beds & autoregulation • Endothelium dependent vasodilation • CBF during exercise • Physiology of CBF across a stenosis • Measurement of CBF • Physiologic assessment of CAD- noninvasively and invasively • Coronary collateral circulation • CBF abnormalities with ‘normal’ coronary vessels

  3. INTRODUCTION • The resting coronary blood flow ~250ml/min (0.8ml/min/g myocardium=5% of COP) • Myocardial oxygen consumption --- balance between supply and demand • According to Fick’s principle, oxygen consumption in an organ is equal to the product of regional blood flow and oxygen extraction capacity. • The heart is unique in having a maximal resting O2 extraction (~70-80%) • So, MVO2 = CBF * CaO2 • Thus, when systemic oxygenation is stable, the oxygen supply is determined by the coronary blood flow

  4. The coronary blood flow is unique: • Helps generate the systole (cardiac output) & simultaneously gets impeded by the systole it generates. • At systole – Arterial flow is minimum: directed from the subendocardium to the subepicardium; and the coronary venous outflow is maximum • Diastole – The coronary inflow is maximum

  5. BASIC PHYSICS OF FLOW • Bernoulli’s principle • Daniel Bernoulli (Swiss scientist)studied fluid dynamics and postulated in his book,Hydrodynamica, that for an inviscid flow an increase in the speed of the fluid occurs simultaneously with a decrease in pressure or a decrease in the fluid's potential energy. • LAW OF CONSERVATION OF ENERGY {Total energy = Kinetic energy + Potential(Pressure) energy} - May explain in part the increase in flow during diastole

  6. Hagen-Poisseuilles equation: -Gives the pressure drop for a viscous liquid( in laminar flow) as it flows through a long cylindrical pipe -Corresponds to the Ohms law for electrical circuits (V=IR) -Thus halving the radius of the tube increases the resistance by 16 times • Principles were also extended to turbulent flow and helped derived the Darcy-Weisbach equation and the Reynolds number

  7. DETERMINANTS OF CORONARY RESISTANCE • Flow is determined by the segmental resistance and therefore an understanding of the resistance beds is necessary: • 3 resistance beds • R1 • R2 • R3

  8. R2( Microcirculatory resistance) – 20- 200µm • Small arteries and arterioles • Capillaries: ~ 20% of R2 ( even if capillary density doubles, perfusion increases by only 10%) • R3( Compressive resistance) - time varying - Increased in heart failure In the subendocardium R3increases but R2 decreases. So, transmural flow is normally uniform.

  9. Broadly 2 compartments of coronary resistance: 1) Epicardial conduit vessels – no pressure loss 2) Resistance vessels -- < 300μm -- gradually dissipating pressure till 20-30 mmHg Coronary driving pressure = Aortic root pressure – LVEDP The interactions of coronary driving pressure and the coronary resistance are coordinated so as to maintain a constant flow for a given workload. ---- CORONARY AUTOREGULATION

  10. CORONARY AUTOREGULATION • Maintenance of a constant regional coronary blood flow over a wide range of coronary arterial pressures when determinants of myocardial oxygen consumption are kept constant. • Below the lower limit: flow becomes pressure dependent • Under optimal circumstances this lower threshold is a mean pressure of 40mmHg. • Sub-endocardial flow compromise: <40mmHg • Sub-epicardial flow compromise: <25mmHg -Due to higher resting blood flow in subendocardium and effects of systole on subendocardial coronary reserve

  11. The threshold increases with increased determinants of oxygen consumption. • Even as constant flow is maintained at a constant work load; -- As the workload increases, the oxygen consumption proportionately increases. -- The increase in MvO2( Demand) needs a proportionate increase in coronary flow ( Supply). -- This increase in CBF is directed by endothelium related flow mediated dilatation as well as by various mediators that decrease coronary resistance.

  12. CORONARY MICROCIRCULATION • A longitudinally distributed network with considerable spatial heterogeneity of control mechanisms. • Each resistance vessel needs to dilate in an orchestrated fashion.

  13. Resistance As (100 -400μm) - shear stress + myogenic • Arterioles (<100 μm) –metabolic • Capillaries- 3500/mm2 • ΔP (Pressure drop) occurs b/w 50 - 200μm

  14. Heterogeneity of microcirculatory auto-regulation: When driving pressure decreases, Autoregulation causes arterioles<100μm dilate where as larger resistance arteries tend to constrict due to a decrease in perfusion pressure. However metabolic vasodilation which is triggered shows a homogenous response.

  15. Transmural penetrating arteries: • Not influenced by metabolic stimuli. • Blood flow driven by coronary driving pressure, flow mediated vasodilation and myogenic regulation. • Significantly influences the subendocardial blood flow

  16. MEDIATORS OF CORONARY RESISTANCE • PHYSICAL FORCES • METABOLIC MEDIATORS • NEURALCONTROL • PARACRINE FACTORS

  17. Physical forces • These are intraluminal forces: • Myogenic regulation: • Ability of the vascular smooth muscle to oppose changes in coronary arteriolar diameter • Probably due to stretch activated L-type Ca channels • Primarily in <100microm • Significant role in coronary autoregulation

  18. 2) Flow mediated vasodilatation: • Coronary diameter regulation in response to changes in local shear stress. • Kuo et al • Endothelium mediated- NO, EDHF • Occurs in both conduit (?hyperpolarisation) as well as resistance arteries (NO mediated)

  19. Metabolic mediators • Adenosine: - Cardiac myocytes during ischemia ( ATP hydrolysis) • T-half of 10sec • A2a receptors - cAMP : Ca2+ activated K-channels • Direct action on <100µm vessels • Indirectly on resistance arteries and conduit arteries : endothelium-dependent • Hypoxia • Exercise –induced myocardial ischemia

  20. K+-ATP channels • - Contributes to resting coronary tone • - It is actually a common effector pathway of several other mediators • Hypoxia - However a direct vasodilatory mechanism is lacking • Acidosis and arterial hypercapnoea:

  21. NEURAL CONTROL- Cholinergic innervation -Endothelium dependent and flow mediated vasodilatory effects also

  22. NEURAL CONTROL- Sympathetic innervation - Sympathetic denervation does not affect resting flow

  23. PARACRINE MEDIATORS Released from epicardial arterial thrombi following plaque rupture

  24. ENDOTHELIUM DEPENDENT MODULATION OF CORONARY TONE A functional endothelium is the major determinant in the normal physiological effects of physical, metabolic, neural and paracrine factors on the coronary tone. • Nitric oxide (NO) • Endothelium dependent Hyperpolarising factor (EDHF) • Prostacyclins • Endothelins

  25. Nitric Oxide • “Molecule of the year” in 1992 • Robert F. Furchgott, Louis J. Ignarro and FeridMurad received Nobel prize for Physiology/Medicine in 1998 • L-arginine + 3/2 NADPH + H+ + 2 O2 = citrulline + NITRIC OXIDE + 3/2 NADP+ • Action: It increases cGMP levels : Decreased i.c Ca levels -Its effects are enhanced by increased shear stress of flow • Exercise : Chronic upregulation of NO synthase • CVD risk factors – Increase oxidative stress(superoxide) – inactivates NO

  26. EDHF • Shear stress induced vasodilation • Opens K+ channels – vasodilation • Probably metabolites of arachidonic acid by the CYP pathway • ? Epoxyeicosatrienoic acid • ? Endothelium derived hydrogen peroxide

  27. PROSTACYCLIN: -Arachidonic acid metabolism via cycloxygenase pathway • Important in collateral vascular resistance • ENDOTHELINS: - prolonged vasoconstictor response • ETa and ETb receptors • Regulates blood flow only in pathophysiological states.

  28. VARYING SENSITIVITIES OF THE MICROCIRCULATION TO STIMULI

  29. Pharmacological Vasodilation • Nitroglycerin: • Vasodilation in conduit and resistance arteries • No effect in nomal coronary arteries due to autoregulatory mechanisms • Improves subendocardial perfusion: • Compensates for impaired endo-dependent mechanisms • Dilates collateral vessels • Reduces LV end-diastolic pressure

  30. Calcium Channel blockers: • Vasodilation of conduit and submaximal action on resistance vessels ( Therefore rarely precipitate subendocardial ischemia ) • Adenosine & agonists : Regadenoson (A2) • Dipyridamole • Papaverine: • 1st agent used for coronary vasodilation • Increases cAMP by inhibiting phosphodiesterase

  31. A newer mechanism for coronary blood flow • Davies et al (Circulation 2006) : “Pushing waves and Suction waves” • Pushing waves : Proximal to distal push- forward - pushes blood till the conduit vessels • Suction waves: Distal to proximal suction effect - backward - main determinant of diastolic flow

  32. CBF DURING EXERCISE ACUTE EXERCISE: • Increases afterload, contractility, LV wall stress, tachycardia and oxygen demand • Proportional increase in myocardial blood flow (2 to 4 fold) mainly through a decrease in R2 and flow mediated dilation. • However in presence of a coronary stenosis the increase in R1 overruns the decrease in R2 above a threshold, causing stress induced ischemia.

  33. PROLONGED EXERCISE TRAINED HEART: The CBF is maintained or increases

  34. PHYSIOLOGY OF CBF ACROSS A CORONARY STENOSIS • Consequence of a coronary obstruction due to CAD: 1) Increased resistance in an epicardial artery due to stenosis 2) Abnormal microcirculatory control

  35. The flow across a stenosis is determined by the P-Q relationship Perfusion of territory distal to a stenosis ------------ DISTAL CORONARY PRESSURE In normal coronaries : R2> R3>> R1 In CAD : R1 > R3 > R2 R1 increases with stenosis severity and impairs flow

  36. Ideal stenosis P-Q relationship • According to Bernoullis principle and law of conservation of energy. The total energy = KE + PE; i.e E ∝ V2 + PE The flow across a stenosis (Flow= A * mean velocity) Thus V ∝ 1/D2 …. -Therefore in 50% stenosis, V- 4 times and KE- 16times. - The PE proportionately decreases and is lost as (ΔP) DISTAL PRESSURE LOSS Post stenosis: V comes back to normal …Therefore KE decreases to pre-stenosis values… PE thus becomes (prestenotic PE)- ΔP i.e =Pd

  37. ΔP= Viscous losses + Separation losses + Turbulence Viscous losses = f1 Q , f1 (Viscous coefficient = 8πμL/ As2 ) (Hagen-Poiseuille equation) Separation losses= f2 Q2, f2 (Separation coefficient= ρ/2[1/As-1/An]2 ) μ - viscosity of blood ρ - density of blood L - length of stenosis As - CSA of stenotic segment An - CSA of normal segment Flow to distal territory = Pd- venous pressure

  38. Thus the pressure drop across a stenosis varies directly with the length of the stenosis and inversely with fourth power of the diameter. • Therefore overall resistance and thus distal pressure is determined mainly by cross sectional area of the stenosis – increases exponentially • Resistance is also flow dependent ( α square of flow) • Abluminal outward remodelling : No effect on P-Q characteristics • Inward remodelling : Significant longitudinal pressure drop

  39. MEASUREMENT OF CORONARY BLOOD FLOW • Earlier microsphere radionuclide techniques were considered gold standard. • Presently, regional myocardial blood flow can be quantitated non-invasively equally accurately using MRI, CT and PET. • Resting CBF – 0.7-1ml/min/g • However a resting CBF gives little information • This may be normal in HCM, CAD, DCMP etc due to inherent “adjusting mechanisms”. • It is the CBF in a “stressed” heart that brings out the true quality of the coronary vasculature. • “STRESS” – Pharmacological / Physiological

  40. Noninvasive flow measurements • MRI, Doppler echo and Dynamic PET (Nuclear Perfusion studies) • Require measurements of the myocardial tissue tracer concentrations and its kinetics.

  41. FUNCTIONAL ASSESSMENT OF CAD - Noninvasive • Vasodilator stress: - Adenosine 140µg/kg/min for 4 min( Dypiridamole 560µg/kg/min) • Induces hyperemia and makes CBF dependent on driving pressure and the residual resistance • 3 to 5 times flow (2-4ml/min/g) • Exposes the minimum coronary vascular resistance of the system • Noninvasive methods may measure either the relative flow (compared to normal regions)or the absolute flow • The concept of Coronary flow reserve pioneered by Lance Gould is central to the functional assessment of CBF across a stenosis.

  42. Coronary reserve : Ability to increase CBF above resting value by maximum pharmacologic vasodilation (4 to 5 fold) Parameters that may affect CFR: - HR - preload - afterload - contractility - systemic oxygen supply • Flow in the maximally vasodilated heart is pressure dependent. • Thus CFR indirectly shows the consistency of the driving coronary pressure uptill the distal territory

  43. Relative Flow Reserve = Regional perfusion of a segment/ Perfusion in normal segment during maximal pharmacological vasodilation/exercise • Compares under same hemodynamic conditions • Independent of HR and MAP • More lesion specific than the AFR --- correlates with FFR Limitations: - Requires a normal reference segment--- ? Diffuse CAD • Low sensitivity – requires relatively large differences in regional flow • The uptake of nuclear tracers may not be proportionate in both regions • Not much prognostic data available

  44. Absolute Flow Reserve = Maximal vasodilated flow in a region of interest/ Resting flow of same region. - Normal AFR ~ 4-5 • Clinically significant impairment if <2 • AFR incorporates functional importance of a stenosis + microcirculatory dysfunction Limitations: - Altered by factors affecting resting flow also (Hb, HCM, Hemodynamics etc) • Instantaneous hemodynamic conditions of the values are different • Cannot specify the importance of the epicardial lesion alone • Correlation with stenosis severity decreases with more extensive CAD

More Related