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As we move on to the coronary circulation, here we need to think about relaxing and
contraction of muscles. So the heart is a muscle, it has myocytes. So where are we going to
get blood flow when a muscle contracts or relaxes? This is a great example of how this process
works. If we look at the pressure in the aorta, which is blood pressure that's going into the
systemic circulation. Systole is the part where you have the highest blood pressure. You notice
though when it has the highest blood pressure, blood flow which is the second row here,
is the lowest. So when the heart is contracting, it is not getting blood flow. Only when the
heart relaxes does it get blood flow. So this sets up a very unique process where during the
contraction of the heart, the heart receives very little of the blood flow it's delivering to the
rest of the body. Only when it relaxes does it obtain the flow necessary for it to exchange
nutrients. This process becomes important especially when you think about how much work the
heart has to do. It's beating 60 to 100 times every minute every hour of every day. Every time
it beats, it loses blood flow during the contraction phase. How this process works is that
any time there is squeezing of the cardiac muscle, it pushes together some of the very small
blood vessels. Therefore, only during the relaxation phase do those blood vessels open up and
engorge the particular coronary myocytes with blood and this increase in blood flow can be
quite dramatic as we saw in the previous graph. What controls the blood flow besides
contraction? For this, you need to think about other muscles and how the regular circulation is
controlled. It's usually controlled by the sympathetic nervous system; however, contracting
muscles control their own blood flow. This is done through this reactive hyperemia that is
as well as an active hyperemia that's due to local vasodilatory molecules. Things like adenosine
and so forth will override the sympathetic nervous systems trying to constrict blood flow to
the area. Because in general, remember, the sympathetic nervous system is trying to
vasoconstrict and only lets that local tissue dilate in response to its own needs, i.e. that's
increase in metabolism. This sets up a principle in which local control overrides the sympathetic
control and we call that functional sympatholysis. The coronary circulation is really developed
increasing based upon the amount of work it does and the one molecule that you really want to
have in mind is adenosine. Adenosine will be the primary molecule that will cause vasodilation
of the local coronary vessels. So even though you have this local control, you can never forget
about autoregulation. So autoregulation will still try to regulate blood flow across the wide
range of perfusion pressures just like it did in the brain. So you have factors that are in
place to try to help the heart have an optimal blood flow. Hopefully you've been able to
appreciate throughout these system courses is that there's certain organ systems you might
want to think of as being a little bit more important. I hate to say that, just a little bit more
important, one system than another. Things like the heart, things like the brain, things like
the kidney need to maintain optimal amount of blood flow. They are more important than
maybe the blood flow that goes to your big toe.