The Principle of Laplace and Scaling of Ventricular Wall Stress and Blood Pressure in Mammals and Birds
Maximum left ventricular wall stress is calculated at end‐diastolic volume and systemic arterial diastolic blood pressure, according to a thick‐walled model for the principle of Laplace. Stress is independent of body mass and averages 13.9 kPa (±2.3; 95% confidence interval) in 24 species of mammals...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Physiological and biochemical zoology 2000-07, Vol.73 (4), p.389-405 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Maximum left ventricular wall stress is calculated at end‐diastolic volume and systemic arterial diastolic blood pressure, according to a thick‐walled model for the principle of Laplace. Stress is independent of body mass and averages 13.9 kPa (±2.3; 95% confidence interval) in 24 species of mammals weighing 0.025–4,000 kg and 15.5 kPa (±4.7) in 12 birds weighing 0.014–110 kg. Birds have higher arterial blood pressures and larger hearts than mammals. Systolic and diastolic arterial blood pressures increase with body mass according toM
0.05in mammals, and heart mass increases according toM
1.06in the same species, further supporting the principle. However, blood pressure in birds is independent of body mass, and heart mass scales isometrically. End‐diastolic stress values, calculated according to Laplace, are about one‐third of peak stresses recorded in isolated mammalian myocardial preparations. |
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ISSN: | 1522-2152 1537-5293 |
DOI: | 10.1086/317741 |