Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction to the Second Edition
- Part I Background mechanics
- Part II Mechanics of the circulation
- 10 Blood
- 11 The heart
- 12 The systemic arteries
- 13 The systemic microcirculation
- 14 The systemic veins
- 15 The pulmonary circulation
- Index
- Table I
15 - The pulmonary circulation
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 January 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface to the First Edition
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction to the Second Edition
- Part I Background mechanics
- Part II Mechanics of the circulation
- 10 Blood
- 11 The heart
- 12 The systemic arteries
- 13 The systemic microcirculation
- 14 The systemic veins
- 15 The pulmonary circulation
- Index
- Table I
Summary
The pulmonary circulation conveys the entire output of the right ventricle via the pulmonary arteries to the alveolar capillaries and returns the blood, via the pulmonary veins, to the left atrium. The lung has a second, though far smaller, circulation, the bronchial circulation. This arises from the thoracic aorta, supplies systemic arterial blood to the lung, has some interconnections (anastomoses) with the pulmonary microcirculation and drains into the systemic venous system.
The pulmonary circulation differs from the systemic circulation in several important respects. For example, it is a low-pressure, low-resistance system; the time-average excess pressure in the pulmonary arteries is only about 2 × 103 Nm−2 (15mm Hg or 20cm H2O), or approximately one-sixth of that in the systemic arteries, while the total blood flow rate through the lungs is the same as that through the systemic circulation. Further differences are that the pulmonary arteries have much thinner walls than the systemic arteries, and the pulmonary vascular bed is apparently not regionally specialized. In addition, vasomotor control in the pulmonary vessels is believed to be relatively unimportant under normal conditions; unlike the systemic arteries and veins, the vessels do not undergo large active changes in their dimensions.
The main function of the lungs is the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the air and the blood. However, any gas for which there is a difference in partial pressure between pulmonary capillary blood and alveolar gas will diffuse across the alveolar capillary membrane.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Mechanics of the Circulation , pp. 467 - 506Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2011