What term describes the structural change in a large vein, such as a saphenous vein, after it is implanted as a coronary artery bypass graft?

Correct answer: Hypertrophic remodeling

Explanation

This question applies the concept of vascular remodeling to a clinical example, the coronary artery bypass graft, testing the understanding of how vessels adapt to dramatic changes in their hemodynamic environment.

Other questions

Question 1

What is the fundamental principle of circulatory function regarding local blood flow control in most tissues?

Question 2

What is the approximate blood flow to the inactive muscles of the body, even though they constitute 30 to 40 percent of the total body mass?

Question 3

During heavy exercise, by how much can muscle blood flow increase compared to the resting state?

Question 4

What are the two phases into which local blood flow control can be divided?

Question 5

According to Figure 17-1, an increase in tissue metabolism to eight times normal results in what approximate increase in blood flow?

Question 6

What happens to the blood flow through an isolated leg when the arterial oxygen saturation decreases to about 25 percent of normal?

Question 7

What is the core concept of the vasodilator theory for acute local blood flow regulation?

Question 8

Which substance is identified as an important local vasodilator, especially for controlling blood flow in the heart muscle?

Question 9

What is the primary premise of the oxygen demand theory for local blood flow control?

Question 10

What is the term for the cyclical opening and closing of precapillary sphincters and metarterioles, which occurs several times per minute?

Question 11

What phenomenon is characterized by a temporary increase in blood flow to four to seven times normal after a tissue's blood supply has been blocked for a short time and then unblocked?

Question 12

The increase in blood flow through a tissue when it becomes highly active, such as an exercising muscle, is known as what?

Question 13

What is the primary mechanism for acute blood flow control in the kidneys?

Question 14

In addition to oxygen concentration, which two substances play prominent roles in the control of blood flow in the brain?

Question 15

What is the primary stimulus for the release of nitric oxide (NO) from endothelial cells as blood flows through arteries and arterioles?

Question 16

What is the approximate half-life of nitric oxide (NO) in the blood after it is released from endothelial cells?

Question 17

What is the primary role of endothelin released from endothelial cells?

Question 18

What is the usual stimulus for the release of endothelin from endothelial cells?

Question 19

The process of increasing tissue vascularity, which generally occurs if the metabolism in a tissue is increased for a prolonged period, is called what?

Question 20

What is the main principle that determines the level of vascularity in long-term vascular control?

Question 21

Which of the following is an example of a vascular growth factor that increases the growth of new blood vessels?

Question 22

In response to a chronic increase in blood pressure, what type of change typically occurs in small arteries and arterioles that constrict?

Question 23

What type of vascular remodeling is stimulated by long-term increases in vascular wall tension in larger arteries that do not constrict in response to increased pressure?

Question 24

Which of the following humoral factors is described as an especially powerful vasoconstrictor hormone?

Question 25

How potent is the vasoconstrictor substance Angiotensin II?

Question 26

What substance, also known as antidiuretic hormone, is described as being even more powerful than angiotensin II as a vasoconstrictor?

Question 27

Which substance, when formed in the blood and tissue fluids, causes powerful vasodilation and increased capillary permeability?

Question 28

Which substance, released from mast cells and basophils during tissue damage or allergic reactions, has a powerful vasodilator effect and increases capillary porosity?

Question 29

What is the effect of an increase in intracellular calcium ion concentration on local blood vessels?

Question 30

What is the effect of an increase in potassium ion concentration on local blood vessels?

Question 31

What is the effect of an increase in magnesium ion concentration on local blood vessels?

Question 32

What is the effect of an increase in hydrogen ion concentration (a decrease in pH) on the arterioles?

Question 33

In the autoregulation mechanism, what is the approximate percent increase in blood flow when arterial pressure rises from about 70 to 175 mm Hg?

Question 34

What is the primary mechanism of the myogenic theory of autoregulation?

Question 35

Which statement best describes the difference in long-term versus acute autoregulation of blood flow when arterial pressure is changed?

Question 36

What is the phenomenon called retrolental fibroplasia, which can cause blindness in premature babies?

Question 37

What is the first stage in the development of collateral circulation after an artery is blocked?

Question 38

Which type of vascular remodeling occurs in response to chronically increased blood flow rate and shear stress, resulting in an increased luminal diameter?

Question 39

What is the primary effect of an increase in carbon dioxide concentration on blood vessels in the brain?

Question 40

What is the general long-term effect of chronically infusing a powerful vasoconstrictor, like angiotensin II, on tissue blood flow if it does not alter the tissue's metabolic rate?

Question 41

What is the primary mechanism by which drugs like sildenafil (a PDE-5 inhibitor) cause vasodilation?

Question 42

What is the consequence of vitamin B deficiency, known as beriberi, on peripheral vascular blood flow?

Question 43

What happens to skin blood flow when humans are exposed to body heating?

Question 44

What is the primary function of the tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism in the kidneys?

Question 45

Which transcription factors are induced by a deficiency of tissue oxygen and lead to the formation of vascular growth factors?

Question 47

Which of the following is NOT listed as a specific need of tissues for blood flow?

Question 48

What is the main reason that tissues almost never experience oxygen nutritional deficiency under normal conditions?

Question 49

According to the text, what is a likely combination of mechanisms that explains acute local blood flow regulation?

Question 50

What effect do the anions acetate and citrate have on blood vessels?