The Brain as Contributor of Plasminogen Activator to the Blood

1970 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-91 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Sudhakaran Menon ◽  
J. Muscat-Baron ◽  
D. Weightman ◽  
H. A. Dewar

1. A considerable increase in the plasminogen activator content in the internal jugular venous blood as compared with that in the arterial blood was found in fifty patients. 2. Inhalation of 5% carbon dioxide in air was associated with increased plasminogen activator content in blood from the internal jugular vein in all the eight patients treated in this way. 3. It is suggested that the human brain makes a contribution of plasminogen activator to the circulation of the body and that the amount contributed is determined by the rate of the blood flow.

1963 ◽  
Vol 18 (5) ◽  
pp. 970-974 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Malcolm Brown ◽  
Robert E. Semple ◽  
C. S. Lennox ◽  
G. S. Bird ◽  
C. W. Baugh

Skin, muscle, and rectal temperatures, and O2 consumption of Eskimos and Caucasians have been compared during an acute cold exposure involving immersion of one hand and forearm in a 5 C water bath. The Eskimos consumed less O2, maintained their rectal temperatures at a higher level, and gave up less heat from the muscles of the limbs. Though the Eskimos had significantly more adipose tissue, average skin temperatures were the same in the two groups. The pattern of temperatures noted now and the previously observed higher blood flow in the hand and forearm of Eskimos point to increased cooling of arterial blood by returning venous blood in the extremities with resultant preservation of heat in the body core. Submitted on August 6, 1962


Blood ◽  
1948 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 329-348 ◽  
Author(s):  
HERRMAN L. BLUMGART ◽  
MARK D. ALTSCHULE

Abstract The cardiac and respiratory adjustments in chronic anemia and their clinical manifestations have been reviewed. When the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood is diminished, an adequate supply of oxygen to the tissues is maintained by an increased cardiac output, an increased velocity of blood flow, and a relatively more complete abstraction of the oxygen from the blood as it passes through the capillaries. With the increased blood flow, the average peripheral resistance is decreased but the state of the small blood vessels is not uniform everywhere; the blood flow in the hands and kidneys, for instance, may be reduced, while that of other parts of the body is increased. The total oxygen consumption of the body in anemia is not strikingly altered. The blood volume generally is slightly reduced but the plasma volume is normal. The deviations from the normal values vary from patient to patient, but generally are definite when the hemoglobin values are less than 50 per cent and are greatest at the lowest levels of hemoglobin concentration. The close interrelationship between the cardiovascular and respiratory systems is exemplified by the coincident changes in the respiratory system in anemia. The rate and depth of respiration often are increased together with a lowering in the vital capacity and its subdivisions, the reserve and complemental air volumes. The resid- ual air is somewhat increased. These deviations from the normal are similar to those observed in pulmonary congestion or edema and denote a loss of elasticity and expansibility favoring the occurrence of exertional dyspnea. The arterial blood saturation is usually normal at rest but, during exertion, a significant lowering becomes apparent. The importance of hemoglobin in the transport of carbon dioxide is reviewed; the decreased availability of hemoglobin as a buffer in carbon dioxide transport in anemia is compensated by the increased ventilation of the blood in the lungs, rendering the arterial blood somewhat alkalotic. The red cells also play an important role in regard to the respiratory enzyme, carbonic anhydrase. In the anemias due to blood loss, malnutrition, chronic infection, uremia, or leukemia, the blood carbonic anhydrase activity is parallel to the decrease in hemoglobin level leading to a deficiency not only of oxygen carrying capacity but also a decreased ability to absorb carbon dioxide from the tissues and to release it in the lungs. The following factors, many of which are closely interrelated, are operative in the production of dyspnea in anemic patients: the increased respiratory minute volume, the decreased vital capacity and its subdivisions, the abnormalities in carbon dioxide transport and dissociation, the reduced arterial oxygen capacity and the decreased blood oxygen saturation during effort, and the frequently observed elevated blood lactic acid values. The symptoms and signs exhibited by anemic patients, including palpitation and breathlessness on exertion, tachycardia, cardiac dilatation and hypertrophy, are described. In addition to an apical systolic murmur, other systolic and diastolic murmurs are occasionally heard. The arterial blood pressure is frequently lowered in anemia; the venous pressure is generally within the limits of normal. Electrocardiographic abnormalities occur in approximately one-quarter of anemic patients but are minor and not specific in character. The occurrence of angina pectoris, congestive failure, and intermittent claudication in some patients with the development of anemia, and disappearance of these conditions as the anemia is alleviated, is discussed with particular reference to the underlying physiologic mechanisms.


2018 ◽  
Vol 1 (96) ◽  
Author(s):  
Julius Dovydaitis ◽  
Albinas Grūnovas

Background.  In  most  studies  on  cardiovascular  system,  testing  of  subjects  was  performed  in  a  horizontal position. With the change of the body position, certain functional changes occur in the cardiovascular system. The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of electrical muscle stimulation (EMS) on arterial and venous blood flows.Methods. Eighteen athletes aged 19–23 performed two sessions of tests in horizontal and sitting positions. Changes in arterial and venous blood flows were recorded before and after EMS. In each session two occlusions were performed. In the horizontal position, the initial occlusion pressure of 20 mmHg was applied and as the balance in arterial and venous blood flow rates was reached, the additional pressure of 20 mmHg (40  mmHg in total). In the sitting position, the occlusion pressure of 40 and 20 mmHg was applied respectively (60 mmHg in total). In both sessions EMS was performed using the electrical stimulator Mioritm 021.Results. In both horizontal and vertical positions, the effect of EMS on arterial blood flow, venous reserve capacity and venous elasticity was insignificant. Arterial and venous blood flows was affected significantly by the change of the body position. In the sitting position, arterial blood flow was significantly (p < .05) lower compared to the horizontal position. Similar results were recorded in venous reserve capacity.Conclusion.  The  study  suggests  that  blood  flow  in  the  calf  muscles  is  affected  by  the  body  position  and hydrostatic pressure; arterial blood flow increases in the horizontal body position.Keywords:  electrical muscle stimulation (EMS), arterial blood flow, venous reserve capacity, venous elasticity


1939 ◽  
Vol 85 (357) ◽  
pp. 787-795 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. Guttmann ◽  
F. Reitmann

No problem in neurology has been approached from so many different angles as has the pathogenesis of the epileptic fit; yet it is far from being solved. Histological examination of the brains of epileptics, electric stimulalation of the human brain during operation, chemical analysis of the body fluids both in general and of the arterial and venous blood of the cerebral vessels in particular, measurements of the intracranial blood-flow, investigations into metabolic changes before, during, and after fits, electro-encephalographic studies, have produced an enormous wealth of data, which it has not, however, been possible to weld into a single theory. The most recent monograph on epilepsy—Kinnier Wilson's article on the subject in Bumke's Handbuch der Neurologie—speaks only of various “determinants” of the fit: the vascular, the humoral, etc.


1959 ◽  
Vol 197 (3) ◽  
pp. 613-616 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dewitt G. Crawford ◽  
Hilton M. Fairchild ◽  
Arthur C. Guyton

The relationship of blood flow through the hind leg of a dog to the gaseous content of the blood has been studied in 20 dogs by two different methods. In 15 dogs the oxygen saturation of the blood flowing through the leg was gradually changed by adding various amounts of venous blood to arterial blood. As the oxygen saturation decreased the blood flow increased—slowly at first, then progressively more rapidly as the oxygen levels fell lower and lower. Even though the oxygen saturation in most experiments was decreased to 30%, the total oxygen transported to the tissues each minute (O2 saturation times blood flow) decreased only to 75% of the control value. This showed that a definite compensatory mechanism exists, with an efficiency of about 65% for preventing tissue hypoxemia. In five animals the oxygen saturation of the blood was maintained constant while the dogs were allowed to breathe 20% carbon dioxide for an hour. By checking the blood flow every 10 minutes it was found that there was no increase in blood flow but rather in three of the animals a decrease to the extent of 35% of the control blood flow and in the remaining two no change. These studies indicate that oxygen deficiency might well be one of the causes of reactive hyperemia but that excess carbon dioxide probably is not involved.


1979 ◽  
Vol 237 (1) ◽  
pp. H25-H33 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. C. Fan ◽  
G. B. Schuessler ◽  
R. Y. Chen ◽  
S. Chien

In 17 pentobarbitalized dogs, the shunting of 15-micrometer and 9-micrometer microspheres was studied in the brain, myocardium, kidney, intestine, and lung. The veins of these organs were catheterized for constant blood withdrawal for 2 min by direct venipuncture. The ratio of microsphere radioactivity in the venous blood to that in the arterial blood gave the shunting of microspheres by the venous sampling technique. The 15-micrometer microspheres showed 2% or less shunting for all organs studied, whereas the 9-micrometer microspheres had shunting ranging from 3% in the coronary sinus to 24% in the portal vein. The shunting of 9-micrometer microspheres was also calculated from direct tissue counting, where the 15-micrometer spheres were considered to be completely entrapped. The results of direct tissue counting indicate that the 2-min venous sampling underestimates microsphere shunting. CO2 administration increased significantly the shunting of 9-micrometer spheres, whereas the shunting of 15-micrometer spheres determined by venous sampling remained less than 2%. Consideration of shunting indicates that the 15-micrometer microspheres might be more appropriate for regional organ blood flow measurements, including the myocardium.


Author(s):  
Chris Cooper

The heart is the organ that pumps blood around the body. If the heart stops functioning, blood does not flow. The driving force for this flow is the pressure difference between the arterial blood leaving the heart and the returning venous blood. ‘Blood pressure and blood flow’ first considers how blood pressure is measured and how blood pressure can affect health. High blood pressure is called hypertension and low blood pressure hypotension. Chronic hypertension has serious long-term adverse health consequences, but can be treated with improved lifestyle choices and a range of medicines, including anti-hypertensive drugs, beta blockers, and ACE inhibitor drugs. The different molecules affecting blood flow are also considered.


The experiments here detailed relate, in the first place, to the relative capacities of venous and arterial blood for heat; secondly, the comparative temperature of these fluids in different parts of the body during life is attempted to be ascertained; and thirdly, the author states those conclusions which he thinks may be drawn from his experiments. In his first experiments he endeavours to discover the relative capacities by the times of cooling equal volumes of venous and arterial blood, regard being also had to the specific gravities of each. When blood was taken from the jugular vein of a lamb, and after the fibrin had been separated from it by stirring with a wooden spatula, its specific gravity was found to be 1050, that of arterial blood from the same lamb, similarly treated, being 1047. The quantity of each taken for experiment was the same, contained in the same vessel, and heated to the same degree. An equal quantity of water in this vessel had cooled from 120° to 80° in ninety-one minutes; arterial blood cooled, through the same interval, in eighty-nine minutes; and venous blood in eighty-eight minutes: and hence the author infers the capacity of venous blood to be to that of arterial as 92 to 93⋅7, that of water being 100. By other experiments made on various mixtures of these fluids with each other at different temperatures, he estimates the proportion to be 93 to 93⋅7.


1958 ◽  
Vol 193 (1) ◽  
pp. 161-168 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leo A. Sapirstein

K42 Cl, Rb86Cl and iodoantipyrine (I131) were given in single intravenous injections to rats. The isotope content of the organs and the arterial blood concentrations were studied as a function of time. K42Cl and Rb86Cl reached a stable level in all organs other than the brain in 6–9 seconds and maintained this level until 64 seconds. The arterial concentration curves for the isotopes showed that the injected dose was almost completely transferred into the arterial system at about 6–8 seconds. The isotopes showed subsequent recirculation amounting to about 40% of the original dose between the first recirculation and 64 seconds. The organs which displayed stability during the period of recirculation must have had extraction ratios from zero time less than 1.00 but equal to that of the whole body. The fractional uptake of indicator by such organs must therefore have been equal to their blood flow fraction of the cardiac output. The brain reached its maximum content of Rb86 and K42 in 5–6 seconds; both isotopes then disappeared rapidly. The brain was thus shown to have a lower extraction ratio toward these isotopes than the body as a whole; its flow fraction could not therefore be measured by their use. Most organs failed to show stability of their iodoantipyrine content between 9 and 64 seconds; this indicator is not suitable for the measurement of the flow fraction of such organs. By combining values for the cardiac output and the fractional uptake of K42 in dog organs, regional blood flow values were obtained. For those other organs where flow values by other methods are available, the agreement was good. The following blood flow values were obtained in the major organs of the dog: Heart (coronary flow), 1.0 ml/gm/min.; kidney, 3.0 ml/gm/min.; liver, 1.2 ml/gm/min. (0.4 ml/gm/min. hepatic artery, 0.8 ml/gm/min. portal vein); skin, 0.07 ml/gm/min.


1966 ◽  
Vol 16 (01/02) ◽  
pp. 032-037 ◽  
Author(s):  
D Ogston ◽  
C. M Ogston ◽  
N. B Bennett

Summary1. The concentration of the major components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system was compared in venous and arterial blood samples from male subjects.2. The plasminogen activator concentration was higher in venous blood and the arterio-venous difference increased as its concentration rose, but the ratio of the arterial to venous level remained constant.3. No arterio-venous difference was found for anti-urokinase activity, antiplasmin, plasminogen and fibrinogen.4. It is concluded that venous blood determinations of the components of the fibrinolytic enzyme system reflect satisfactorily arterial blood levels.


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