Physiology
Textbooks
Boundless Anatomy and Physiology
Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels
Control of Blood Pressure
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels Control of Blood Pressure
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology Cardiovascular System: Blood Vessels
Physiology Textbooks Boundless Anatomy and Physiology
Physiology Textbooks
Physiology
Concept Version 12
Created by Boundless

Role of the Cardiovascular Center

The cardiovascular system plays a role in body maintenance by transporting hormones and nutrients and removing waste products.

Learning Objective

  • Explain the role of the cardiovascular center in controlling blood pressure


Key Points

    • The cardiovascular center is a part of the human brain found in the medulla oblongata, responsible for regulation of cardiac output.
    • Numerous receptors in the circulatory system can detect changes in pH or stretch and signal these changes to the cardiovascular center.
    • The cardiovascular center can alter heart rate and stroke volume to increase blood pressure and flow.

Term

  • cardiovascular centre

    A region of the brain responsible for nervous control of cardiac output.


Full Text

The cardiovascular center forms part of the autonomic nervous system and is responsible for regulation of cardiac output. Located in the medulla oblongata, the cardiovascular center  contains three distinct components: the cardioaccelerator center, the cardioinhibitor center, and the vasomotor center. 

The cardioaccelerator center stimulates cardiac function by regulating heart rate and stroke volume via sympathetic stimulation from the cardiac accelerator nerve. The cardioinhibitor center slows cardiac function by decreasing heart rate and stroke volume via parasympathetic stimulation from the vagus nerve. The vasomotor center controls vessel tone or contraction of the smooth muscle in the tunica media. Changes in diameter affect peripheral resistance, pressure, and flow, which in turn affect cardiac output. The majority of these neurons act via the release of the neurotransmitter norepinephrine from sympathetic neurons. Although each center functions independently, they are not anatomically distinct.

The cardiovascular center can respond to numerous stimuli. Hormones such as epinephrine and norepinephrine or changes in pH such as acidification due to carbon dioxide accumulation in a tissue during exercise are detected by chemoreceptors. Baroreceptors that detect stretch can also signal to the cardiovascular center to alter heart rate.

Human circulatory system

The cardiovascular system is composed largely of the circulatory system, or the system of blood vessels that distributes oxygen from the lungs throughout the body.

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