Relationship between blood pressure and blood flow

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Hi, I’m really struggling with the relationship between blood pressure and blood flow. I’m hoping that somebody could really dumb the answer down for me as much as possible.

Like, I think I understand hydrostatic pressure. When it comes to the leaky vessels, you need more pressure to squeeze stuff out in those areas. And then osmosis or passive transport whatever balances things out again afterwards. That makes sense to me.

But then why would the kidneys for example want to raise blood pressure in other areas? Like, just high blood pressure in general, say, in the arteries. Why constrict those? Why would you want that? I kind of understand how blood pressure = cardiac output x resistance. Wouldn’t that mean blood flow goes down? Increasing resistance to increase blood pressure?

I mean, plus the damage that high blood pressure is supposed to do over time. And this is then on top of impeded blood flow. And so, I just keep hearing how various systems or vessels etc constrict to increase pressure on purpose. Why would the body want that?

Basically, what is the point of high blood pressure? It seems like it sucks. Thanks.

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2 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It seems like you’re asking two questions here:
1. What is the relationship between blood pressure and blood flow? 2. Why does the body constrict blood vessels to create higher blood pressure?

It seems like you’ve got a pretty decent understanding already. Basically, the body constricts or dilates blood vessels to control how much blood is going to a specific area of the body. For example, blood vessels near the surface will constrict when the body is cold, in order to reduce the blood flow and therefore heat transfer at the surface of the body, and to allow vital organs to receive greater blood flow due to the constricting of those surface vessels. Another example is during exercise, blood vessels will dilate and heart rate increases to allow more oxygen to be transported throughout the body. During stress, heart rate increases and blood vessels constrict to allow blood to be used in the most necessary places in a fight or flight response.

Because the body is a closed system with a variable pump so to speak (the heart), vasoconstriction will cause higher blood pressure. This is more a product of the flow restriction, which is how the body redirects blood for specific needs. Chronic blood pressure is an issue, as the increased blood drag wears on the walls of arteries over time. However, small increases in blood pressure are normal due to small stress responses we experience in our day to day lives.

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