There are many factors that influence vascular resistance.
Vascular compliance is determined by the
muscle tone in the
smooth muscle tissue of the
tunica media and the
elasticity of the
elastic fibers there, but the muscle tone is subject to continual
homeostatic changes by
hormones and
cell signaling molecules that induce
vasodilation and
vasoconstriction to keep
blood pressure and
blood flow within
reference ranges. In a first approach, based on fluids dynamics (where the flowing material is continuous and made of continuous atomic or molecular bonds, the internal friction happen between continuous parallel layers of different velocities) factors that influence vascular resistance are represented in an adapted form of the
Hagen–Poiseuille equation: :R = \frac{8 L \eta} {\pi r^4} where • R = resistance to blood flow • L = length of the vessel • η =
viscosity of blood • r = radius of the blood vessel Vessel length is generally not subject to change in the body. In
Hagen–Poiseuille equation, the flow layers start from the wall and, by viscosity, reach each other in the central line of the vessel following a parabolic velocity profile. In a second approach, more realistic and coming from experimental observations on blood flows, according to Thurston, there is a plasma release-cell layering at the walls surrounding a plugged flow. It is a fluid layer in which at a distance δ, viscosity η is a function of δ written as η(δ), and these surrounding layers do not meet at the vessel centre in real blood flow. Instead, there is the plugged flow which is hyperviscous because holding high concentration of RBCs. Thurston assembled this layer to the flow resistance to describe blood flow by means of a viscosity η(δ) and thickness δ from the wall layer. The blood resistance law appears as R adapted to blood flow profile : :R = \frac{c L \eta(\delta)}{\pi \delta r^3} If the resistance is inversely proportional to the fourth power of vessel radius, the resulting force exerted on the wall vessels, the parietal
drag force, is inversely proportional to the second power of the radius. The force exerted by the blood flow on the vessel walls is, according to the
Poiseuille equation, the wall
shear stress. This wall shear stress is proportional to the pressure drop. The pressure drop is applied on the section surface of the vessel, and the wall shear stress is applied on the sides of the vessel. So the total force on the wall is proportional to the pressure drop and the second power of the radius. Thus the force exerted on the wall vessels is inversely proportional to the second power of the radius. The blood flow resistance in a vessel is mainly regulated by the vessel radius and viscosity when blood viscosity too varies with the vessel radius. According to very recent results showing the sheath flow surrounding the
plug flow in a vessel, the sheath flow size is not neglectible in the real blood flow velocity profile in a vessel. The velocity profile is directly linked to flow resistance in a vessel. The viscosity variations, according to Thurston,
Adenosine most likely does not play a role in maintaining the vascular resistance in the resting state. However, it causes vasodilation and decreased vascular resistance during hypoxia. Adenosine is formed in the myocardial cells during hypoxia, ischemia, or vigorous work, due to the breakdown of high-energy phosphate compounds (e.g.,
adenosine monophosphate, AMP). Most of the adenosine that is produced leaves the cell and acts as a direct vasodilator on the vascular wall. Because adenosine acts as a direct vasodilator, it is not dependent on an intact endothelium to cause vasodilation. Adenosine causes vasodilation in the small and medium-sized resistance arterioles (less than 100 μm in diameter). When adenosine is administered it can cause a
coronary steal phenomenon, where the vessels in healthy tissue dilate more than diseased vessels. When this happens blood is shunted from potentially
ischemic tissue that can now become
ischemic tissue. This is the principle behind adenosine
stress testing. Adenosine is quickly broken down by
adenosine deaminase, which is present in
red cells and the vessel wall. The
coronary steal and the
stress test can be quickly terminated by stopping the adenosine infusion. ==Systemic==