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Afterload
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Afterload
, Ventricular Afterload, Peripheral Vascular Resistance, Systemic Vascular Resistance
See Also
Ventricular Preload
Blood Volume
Cardiac Output
(and
Stroke Volume
)
Blood Pressure Physiology
Definitions
Afterload
Load or resistance (arterial pressure) against which the the ventricle
Muscle
must contract
Ventricular wall stress or peak tension during systolic contraction
Physiology
Gene
ral
Afterload increases
Requires increased left ventricular tension and increased workload
Contraction becomes less efficient
Physiology
Ventricular wall stress
Laplace Law
Wall tension = (pressure * radius) / (2 * wallThickness)
Causes of increased ventricular wall stress
Increased peak ventricular transmural pressure
Increased ventricular chamber size
Causes of decreased ventricular wall stress
Increased ventricular hypertrophy
Physiology
Afterload Components
Ventricular Preload
(end-diastolic volume)
Pleural pressure
Negative pleural pressure (e.g. inspiration) counteracts ventricular contraction forces
Results in decreased
Blood Pressure
(e.g.
Pulsus Paradoxus
)
Positive pleural pressure (e.g. PPV) augments ventricular contraction
Results in transient increased
Blood Pressure
However increased pleural pressure (intrathoracic pressure) also can decrease
Preload
Decreased venous return lowers
Blood Pressure
Vascular impedance
Aorta and pulmonary artery diminish the rate of change of pressure and flow
Dampens fluctuations in pulsatile flow
Key force in ventricular emptying, but is not typically measurable
Peripheral Vascular Resistance or Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR)
Small terminal vessels (primarily arterioles and capillaries) resist steady flow (non-pulsatile flow)
Vascular resistance increases (and flow decreases)
Increases blood viscosity (increased
Hematocrit
or
Dehydration
)
Systemic Vascular Resistance (SVR) Calculation
SVR = (mAoP - mRAP)/CO x 80
Where mAoP = Mean Aortic Pressure (e.g. normal young adult male: 104 mmHg)
Where mRAP= Mean
Right Atrial Pressure
(e.g. normal young adult male: 5 mmHg)
Where CO =
Cardiac Output
(e.g. normal young adult male: 5 Liters)
Example = (104-5)/5 * 80 = 1584 dynes/s/cm^-5
Pulmonary Resistance
PR= (mPAP - mPCWP)/CO x 80
Where mPAP = Mean Pulmonary Artery Pressure (e.g. normal young adult male: 16 mmHg)
Where mPCWP = Mean Pulmonary Capillary Wedge Pressure (e.g. normal young adult male: 9 mmHg)
Where CO =
Cardiac Output
(e.g. normal young adult male: 5 Liters)
Example = (16-9)/5 * 80 = 112 dynes/s/cm^-5
References
Davies (1986)
Acute Respiratory Failure
, Cyberlog
Physiology
Effectors of Afterload
Decreased Afterload (Vasodilation)
ACE Inhibitor
s and
Angiotensin Receptor Blocker
s
Hydralizine
Nitroglycerin
Dihydropyridine Calcium Channel Blocker
s (e.g.
Nifedipine
,
Amlodipine
,
Nicardipine
)
Alpha Adrenergic Central Agonist
(e.g.
Clonidine
)
Increased Afterload
Systemic
Hypertension
Aortic Stenosis
Aortic Coarctation
Pulmonary Hypertension
(RV Afterload)
Diagnostics
Right Afterload
Mean pulmonary artery pressure or wedge pressure
Left Afterload
Mean arterial pressure
References
Killu and Sarani (2016) Fundamental
Critical Care
Support, p. 93-114
Marino (2014) ICU Book, 4th Ed Wolters-Kluwer p. 159-66
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