Chapter 18 Section 18.4-18.5
Water in the blood exerts pressure on the walls of capillaries, generating ________.
blood hydrostatic pressure
An excess amount of water in the interstitial fluid is known as ____.
edema
Small solutes can pass through small pores in some capillaries known as ____.
fenestrations
Blood pressure is equivalent to __________.
hydrostatic pressure
In which direction will water move when hydrostatic pressure exceeds colloid osmotic pressure at the arteriolar end of a capillary?
water is pushed out of the capillary by filtration
Which pressure remains the same along the length of a capillary?
Colloid osmotic pressure
Under what conditions will the myogenic mechanism slow blood flow into a capillary bed?
Rising arteriolar pressure
What type of capillaries have large pores within their endothelial cells and are the leakiest?
Sinusoidal capillaries
Tissue perfusion is largely controlled by ______ to ensure that blood flow meets the cells' needs.
autoregulation
The most important force driving reabsorption at the venous end of a capillary is _____.
blood colloid osmotic pressure
Net filtration pressure (NFP) is equal to the:
net hydrostatic pressure minus the net colloid osmotic pressure.
The main local autoregulatory mechanism of cardiac muscle tissue is ____.
oxygen
Blood flow through the capillary bed is regulated by ______.
precapillary sphincters
What is edema?
swelling
Tissue perfusion in the heart decreases during ventricular ____ and increases during ventricular ____.
systole; diastole
Large, lipid-insoluble molecules cross capillary walls by ___.
transcytosis