THE BLOOD VESSELS STRUCTURE
The lung receives its blood supply from two vascular systemsthe bronchial and pulmonary circulations. The nutritive blood flow to. all but the alveolar structures comes from the bronchial circulation. About one third of the venous effluent drains into the systemic veins and back to the right ventricle. The remainder drains into the pulmonary veins and, along with the Thebesian veins in the heart, represents a component of the 1 to 2 per cent right-to-left shunt found in normal subjects.
The pulmonary arterial system runs alongside the airways from the hila to the periphery. The arteries down to the level of the subsegmental airways (2 mm diameter) are thinwalled, predominantly elastic vessels. Beyond this, the arteries become muscularized until they reach diameters of 30 |xm, where the muscular coat disappears. Most of the arterial pressure drop takes place in these small muscular arteries, which are responsible for the active control of blood flow distribution in the lung. The pulmonary arterioles empty into an extensive capillary network and drain into thin-walled pulmonary veins, which eventually join with the arteries and bronchi at the hilum and exit the lung to enter the left atrium.
- ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE OF THE EXTREMITIES
- PERIPHERAL ANEURYSMS AMD FISTULAE
- NONPULMONARY FACTORS
- RAYNAUD'S PHENOMENON
- GENERAL PRINCIPLES OF CARDIAC SURGERY
- THE BLOOD VESSELS STRUCTURE
- VENTILATION
- PERFUSION
- ARTERIAL TRAUMA
- NONRESPIRATORY FUNCTIONS OF THE LUNG
- PERIPHERAL VENOUS DISEASE
- MISCELLANEOUS AORTIC DISEASE
- GENERAL SURGERY IN THE PATIENT WITH HEART DISEASE
- THE AIRWAY STRUCTURE
- HEART DISEASE AND PREGNANCY
- ARTERIOSCLEROSIS OBLITERANS
- PULMONARY GAS EXCHANGE
- THROMBOANGIITIS OBLITERANS
- GAS TRANSFER