HEMODYNAMICS
PERFUSION IS PROPORTIONAL TO:
HEMODYNAMICS
CARDIAC OUTPUT IS EQUAL TO?
Stroke Vol x Heart Rate
HEMODYNAMICS
Stroke Vol is affected by (4)
preload
afterload
Contractility
preload - afterload = SV
HEMODYNAMICS
Systemic Vascular Resistance
most common way to increase resistance?
decrease diameter of the blood vessel
HEMODYNAMICS
MAP by way of BP is equal to?
2/3 diastyloic - 1/2 systolic
HEMODYNAMICS
MAP
Mean Arterial Pressure is equal to?
CO x SVR x CVP
CVP is usually so low you can drop it out of the equation
NOTE RELATIONSHIP AND HOW a pt in shock can have adequate BP but no perfusion
HEMODYNAMICS
MAP= CO x SVR x CVP
Perfusion is proportional to CO, SVR, Oxygen content
This explains why there is often low BP and low tissue perfusion simmulatously
HEMODYNAMICS
How do you assess/measure Heart Function?
HEMODYNAMICS
BP =
BP=CO x SVR
HEMODYNAMICS
CO =
CO = SV x HR
HEMODYNAMICS
SV effected by 3 factors
HEMODYNAMICS
SV =
SV = Preload - Afterload
HEMODYNAMICS
Tissue Perfusion is proportional to (3)
CO
SVR systemic vascular resistance
Oxygen Content
HEMODYNAMICS
MAP =
MAP = CO x SVR x CVP
CVP is so small it can ge dropped from the equation
HEMODYNAMICS
Davis
HEMODYNAMICS
Central Venous Pressure
*Evaluating the function of the heart and vessels *
HEMODYNAMICS
Pulmonary Cappillary Wedge Pressure
*Evaluating the function of the heart and vessels *
HEMODYNAMICS
Cardiogenic Shock: Increase or decrease in PCWP? and WHY?
Increase PCWP because heart is not fxn properly and pushing blood forward, blood is pooling in the heart
HEMODYNAMICS
Hypovolemic Shock: PCWP increase or decrease?
Why?
decrease because of the decrease in blood volume in the heart
HEMODYNAMICS
How do you assess oxygen content in the blood?(3)
HEMODYNAMICS
ScvO2