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VASCULAR SYSTEM

937

likewise have their centre in the spinal bulb

antagonizing more or less the action of

From Howell's Texl-Boak af Physiology, by permission of W. B. Saunders Co.

FIG. 18.»B, arterial blood pressure. K, record of volume of kidney. Inhibition of heart on faradizing vagus nerve.

and are in tonic action, -

the vagal centre. i The

vagus nerve works

directly on the cardiac

muscle, and produces

some change (signalized

by a positive variation

in the electrical state of

the heart) which results

in a depression of the

excitability, the conductivity,

the force and

the frequency of .the

heart. After the vagal

arrest the heart beats

more forcibly, owing,

it is thought, to the

greater accumulation of

contractile material during

the period of rest.

The converse of all these

effects occurs on stimulation

of the accelerator

nerves. Excitation of

these nerves may excite

to renewed efforts an

excised heart which has

just ceased to 2 beat

after withdrawal of the

supply of nutritive

solution. Hence it is

thought by some, that

the accelerator nerves

tonic ally exert a sustaining influence on the heart. The alkaloid atropm paralyses the va al nerve endin s in g

the heart, while nicotine paralyses the gan-glion cells. Mugcarin obtained from poisonous fungi slows and finally arrests the heart. Adrenalin, the active principle of the medulla of the supra-renal glands, augments its power. Chloroform depresses it and in poisonous dose throws the heart into paralytic dilatation. A great many of the cardiac vagal fibres convey impulse to the spinal bulb (centripetal), and redexly influence the heart frequency, the breathing and the tonus of the blood vessels. In particular certain fibres, termed depressor (discovered by Ludwig and Cyon, 1866), cause dilatation of the arterioles and a fall of arterial pressure by inhibiting the tonic action of the vaso-motor centre in the spinal bulb. The depressor fibres arise from the root of the aorta, and over distension of this part excites them, as evidenced not Only by the above effect, but also by the electrical variation (action current) which has been observed passing up the depressor nerve. Sensory impressions originating in the heart do not as a rule enter into consciousness. They are carried by the cardiac nerves to the sympathetic ganglia, and thence to the upper thoracic region of the spinal cord, where they come into relation with the sensory nerves from the pectoral region, upper limb, shoulder, neck and head. The impressions are not felt in the heart, but referred to these sensory cutaneous nerves. Thus cardiac pain is felt in the chest wall and upper limbs and particularly on the left side. The function of the cardiac nerves is to co-ordinate the beat of the heart with the needs of the body and to co-ordinate the functions of other organs with the needs of the heart. For example, an undue rise of arterial pressure, induced, let us say, by compression of the abdomen, excites the centre of the vagus and produces slowing of the heart and a consequent lowering of arterial pressure. The heart of a mammal, however, continues to

the branches of the cardiac plexus

control and co-ordination of the

to the continuance of life.

Water flowing through a tube

encounters a resistance

heart are

Certain

physical

factors

concern-

ing' the

circula-

tlon.

(lowing the fluid with kinetic ene

finally the flow ceases, the total

sufficient to overcome the resistance. function ate after a section of all

has been made, so that the nervous

not absolutely essential

from a constant head of pressure

occasioned by the friction of the

moving water particles against each other and against the stationary layer that wets the wall of the tube. Part of the potential energy of the head of pressure is spent in enrgy, the greater part in

overcoming this resistance is rubbed down into heat. The narrower the tube is made, the greater the friction, until energy being then in-The

resistance may be measured at an oint in the tube b Y P, Y

inserting a side tube 'in the vertical position. The water rises to a certain height in the side tube, indicating the head of pressure spent in overcoming the resistance between the point of measurement and the orifice. If the lower end of the side tube is bent thus and inserted so that its orifice faces the stream, the water will rise higher than it did in the first case. The extra rise indicates the head of pressure spent in maintaining the velocit of flow. Such a method has been used to measure the velocity of flow in the vascular system (Napoleon Cybulski). When a stream of wateris transmitted intermittently by the frequent strokes of a pump through a long elastic rubber tube, the fluid does not issue in jets as it would in the case' of a rigid tube, but flows out continuously. The elastic tube is distended by the force of the pump, and its elasticity maintains the outflow between the strokes. The continuous outflow here depends on the elasticity of the tube and the resistance to flow. In the vascular system an area of vessels of capillary size is placed between the large arteries and veins. This area opposes a great resistance to flown The arteries also are ex tensile elastic tubes. The effect of the peripheral resistance, as it is called, is to raise the pressure on the arterial side and lower it on the venous. The resistance to flow is situated chiefly, not in the capillaries, but in the small arteries, where 'the velocity is high; for “skin friction ”that is, theffriction of the moving concentric layers of blood against one anotherhnd against the layer: which wets the wall of these blood vessels is proportional to the surface area and to the viscosity of the blood—is nearly proportional to the square of the velocity of flow, and is inversely proportional to the sectional area of the vessels. Owing to the resistance to the capillary outflow, the large arteries are expanded by each systolic output of the heart, and the elasticity of their walls comes into play, causing the outflow to continue durin 'the succeeding diastole of the heart. The conditions are such tixat th e intermittent flow from the heart is converted into a continuous flow through the capillaries. If the arteries were rigid tubes, it would be necessary for the heart to force on the whole column of blood at one and the same time; but, owing to the elasticity of these vessels, the heart is saved from such a prolonged and jarring strain, and -can pass into diastolic rest, leaving the elasticity of the distended arteries to maintain the flow. As a result of disease, the elastic tissue may degenerate and the arteries become rigid., Besides the saving of heart-strain, there are other advantages in the elasticity of the arteries. It has been found that an intermittently acting pump maintains a greater outflow through an elastic than through a rigid tube; that is to say, if the tubes be of equal bore; The four chief factors which co-operate in producing the conditions of pressure and velocity in the vascular system are-(I) the heart-beat, (2) the peripheral resistance, (3) the elasticity of the arteries, (4) the quantity of blood in the system. Suppose the body to be in the horizontal position and the vascular system to be brought to rest by, say, excitation of the vagus nerve and arrest of the heart. A sufficiency of blood to distend it collects within the venous' cistern. The arterial system, owin to its elasticity and contractility, empties. If the heart now iegin. to beat, blood is taken from the venous system and is driven into the arterial system., The arteries receive more blood than can escape through' the capillary vessels, and the arterial side of the system becomes distended, until equilibrium is reached, and as much blood escapes into the venous side per unit of time as is delivered by the heart. The flow in the capillaries and veins has now become a constant one and if the side pressure be measured it will be found to fall from the arteries to-the capillaries, and from the capillaries to the venae cavae. In the large arteries there is a large side pressure which rises and falls with the pulses of the heart. The pulse waves spread out over a wider and wider area as the arteries branch. They finally die away in the arterioles. An increase or decrease in the energy of the heart-beat'will increase or decrease respectively the velocity of flow and pressure of the blood. An increase or decrease in the total width of the arterioles respectively will lessen or raise the resistance; increase or decrease the velocity; lower or raise the blood pressure. A loss of blood, other conditions remaining the same, would cause a decrease in pressure and velocity. As a matter of fact, such a loss is compensated for by the adjust ability of the vascular system. Tissue lymph passes from the tissues into the blood. and the blood vessels of the limbs and abdomen constrict, and thus the pressureiis kept up, and an efficient circulation maintained through thebrain, lungs and coronary vessels of the heart. The whole vascular system is lined within by a layer of flattened cells, the endothelium; each cell is exceedingly thin and cemented to its fellows by a wavy border of an interstitial protoplasmic substance. 'The endothelium affords a Stmm” smooth surface along which the blood can flow with "fthe ease. ' Outside it, there exists in 'the arteries and veins bmod a middle and fanlexternal coat. The middle coat varies Vessels greatly in thickness and contains most of the non-striated muscle-cells, which in the smaller arteries and arterioles form; a particularly well developed band. In the larger arteries (fig. 19) a great deal of yellow elastic tissue, together with some white, fibrous tissue, pervades the middle coat. At the inner and outer border of 'this coat the elastic fibres fuse to form an internal and external fen est rated membrane. This coat endows the arteries with extensibility, elasticity and contractilitv. The outside coat consists mostly of white fibrous' tissue and not only protects the arteries, but by its rigidity prevents over-distension. n the veins (fig. 20), where the middle coat is somewhat thinner and contains less elastic tissue, the outer coat'consists mostly of muscle-fibres. The valves of theyeins are formed of fibrous and elastic tissu e covered with endothelium. As the arterioles branch into capillaries the muscular and elastic elements become less and less, until in the capillaries themselves there is left only the layer of endothelium, supported by some stellate connective tissue cells The

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