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  2. Baroreflex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroreflex

    The baroreflex or baroreceptor reflex is one of the body's homeostatic mechanisms that helps to maintain blood pressure at nearly constant levels. The baroreflex provides a rapid negative feedback loop in which an elevated blood pressure causes the heart rate to decrease. Decreased blood pressure decreases baroreflex activation and causes heart ...

  3. Pressure–volume diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure–volume_diagram

    Blood flows from the left atrium to the left ventricle. Atrial contraction completes ventricular filling. As it can be seen, the PV loop forms a roughly rectangular shape and each loop is formed in an anti-clockwise direction. Very useful information can be derived by examination and analysis of individual loops or series of loops, for example:

  4. Pressure–volume loop experiments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure–volume_loop...

    The minimum and maximum volumes (V max and V min) from each loop in the series of loops are plotted on a graph. V max and V min lines are extrapolated and at their point of intersection, where V max is equal to V min, must be zero—conductance is parallel conductance only. The volume at this point is the correction volume.

  5. Renin–angiotensin system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Renin–angiotensin_system

    As with most other capillary beds in the body, the constriction of afferent arterioles increases the arteriolar resistance, raising systemic arterial blood pressure and decreasing the blood flow. However, the kidneys must continue to filter enough blood despite this drop in blood flow, necessitating mechanisms to keep glomerular blood pressure up.

  6. Pressure–volume loop analysis in cardiology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure–volume_loop...

    Pressure-Volume loops showing end-systolic pressure volume relationship. End-systolic pressure volume relationship (ESPVR) describes the maximal pressure that can be developed by the ventricle at any given LV volume. This implies that the PV loop cannot cross over the line defining ESPVR for any given contractile state.

  7. Lumped parameter model for the cardiovascular system

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lumped_parameter_model_for...

    The lumped parameter model consists in a system of ordinary differential equations that adhere to the principles of conservation of mass and momentum balance. The model is obtained exploiting the electrical analogy where the current represents the blood flow, the voltage represents the pressure difference, the electric resistance plays the role of the vascular resistance (determined by the ...

  8. Wiggers diagram - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiggers_diagram

    Blood pressure. Aortic pressure; Ventricular pressure; Atrial pressure; Ventricular volume; Electrocardiogram; Arterial flow (optional) Heart sounds (optional) The Wiggers diagram clearly illustrates the coordinated variation of these values as the heart beats, assisting one in understanding the entire cardiac cycle. [1]

  9. Baroreceptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baroreceptor

    The blood volume determines the mean pressure throughout the system, in particular in the venous side where most of the blood is held. The low-pressure baroreceptors have both circulatory and renal effects; they produce changes in hormone secretion, resulting in profound effects on the retention of salt and water ; they also influence intake of ...