The heart and circulation : an integrative model

Author(s)

Bibliographic Information

The heart and circulation : an integrative model

Branko Furst

Spriger, c2014

  • hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book traces the development of the basic concepts in cardiovascular physiology in the light of the accumulated experimental and clinical evidence and, rather than making the findings fit the standard pressure-propulsion mold, let the phenomena 'speak for themselves'. It starts by considering the early embryonic circulation, where blood passes through the valveless tube heart at a rate that surpasses the contractions of its walls, suggesting that the blood is not propelled by the heart, but possesses its own motive force, tightly coupled to the metabolic demands of the tissues. Rather than being an organ of propulsion, the heart, on the contrary, serves as a damming-up organ, generating pressure by rhythmically impeding the flow of blood. The validity of this model is then confirmed by comparing the key developmental stages of the cardiovascular system in the invertebrates, the insects and across the vertebrate taxa. The salient morphological and histological features of the myocardium are reviewed with particular reference to the vortex. The complex, energy-dissipating intracardiac flow-patterns likewise suggest that the heart functions as an organ of impedance, whose energy consumption closely matches the generated pressure, but not its throughput. Attention is then turned to the regulation of cardiac output and to the arguments advanced by proponents of the 'left ventricular' and of the 'venous return' models of circulation. Hyperdynamic states occurring in arteriovenous fistulas and congenital heart defects, where communication exists between the systemic and pulmonary circuits at the level of atria or the ventricles, demonstrate that, once the heart is unable to impede the flow of blood, reactive changes occur in the pulmonary and systemic circulations, leading to pulmonary hypertension and Eisenmenger syndrome. Finally, the key points of the nook are summarized in the context of blood as a 'liquid organ' with autonomous movement.

Table of Contents

PART I - Early Embryo Circulation.- Introduction.- Early Embryo Circulation - Morphologic Features.- The Onset of Circulation.- Hemodynamics of the Early Embryo Circulation.- Flow Patterns in the Early Embryo Circulation.- Heart Vortex Formation.- Is There a Circulation Without a Heart? .- Embryo Heart is not a Peristaltic Pump.- Flow Perturbation Experiments.- Heart Rate Perturbations.- The Heart as Generator of Pressure.- Ventriculo-Vascular Interaction.- A Brief Comparative Phylogeny.- Evolutionary Aspect of the Rhythmical System.- PART II - Mature Circulation.- Functional Morphology of the Heart.- Regulation of Cardiac Output.- Models of the Heart.- Cardiovascular Response during Exercise.- Hemodynamic Effects of Aortic Occlusion.- Increased Pulmonary Flows.- Single Ventricle Physiology.- Blood as an Organ.

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Details

  • NCID
    BB16530037
  • ISBN
    • 9781447152767
  • LCCN
    2013945553
  • Country Code
    uk
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    London
  • Pages/Volumes
    xxix, 226 pages
  • Size
    25 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
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