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What is preload?

Some say Preload = End-Diastolic Pressure, others say Preload = End-Diastolic Volume, so which one is it? Watch and find out! Rishi is a pediatric infectious disease physician and works at Khan Academy. Created by Rishi Desai.

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  • leaf green style avatar for user David
    Doesn't the wall stress calculation assume no compliance or elastance?
    (8 votes)
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  • primosaur ultimate style avatar for user Swift Runner
    Why is everything just to do with the left ventricle?
    (4 votes)
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    • leafers ultimate style avatar for user Anna
      The left ventricle circulates blood to the entire body, which means that it experiences significantly more resistance than the right ventricle, which circulates blood only to the pulmonary system. Although pulmonary hypertension exists, it is much less common than systemic hypertension.
      (6 votes)
  • leaf green style avatar for user Joel Balmer
    At you use R_TOT in the wall stress equation. I believe that should be the internal radius as the pressure is only acting over the inside of the heart? I believe the derivation of this equation more generally uses for pressure vessels supports this. Unfortunately I cant type the derivation here very easily, but here on wikipedia it describes the equation.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pressure_vessel
    Refer to 'Stress in thin walled pressure vessels'

    I have posted the same question on the next video where R_TOT is used again.
    Cheers
    (6 votes)
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  • leaf green style avatar for user donaldpaloma
    is it safe to say, in simpler terms, that preload is the amount of stretching the ventricles experience when they receive blood from the atria?
    (4 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user Sophie
    Is preload of the right ventricle same as the preload of the left ventricle?
    (3 votes)
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  • marcimus pink style avatar for user Pål
    My textbook (Rhoades&Bell 4th int. ed. page 217) used the concept of vascular capacitance and compliance, but explains nothing of elastance.

    Is elastance (=EDP/EDV) simply the reciprocal of vascular capacitance (=EDV/transmural pressure)?
    (3 votes)
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  • blobby green style avatar for user melaiancu
    what is extracorporeal circulation?
    (2 votes)
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    • spunky sam blue style avatar for user jose benavidez
      extra corporeal circulation is when the blood is taken away from the body's circulation and then it returned. So it is circulating trough an artificial system outside the body.A good example of this is dialysis, When a patient is receiving dialysis the blood gets removed; It passes trough a filter and the it gets returned to the body. Or like when you donate platelets and they return your blood the needles and tubes that pass trough the machine are the extra corporeal circuit.
      (2 votes)
  • male robot hal style avatar for user Jared Trout
    Is this measured at the ventricle or atria? I know that you could specifically specify in conversation. But when people say preload by its self as pertaining to the whole heart. is there a convention in which we should think about it? I think it would be safe to assume it is measured at the left ventricle when not specified. Is this correct?
    (1 vote)
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  • leafers seedling style avatar for user Nita Jain
    One of my physiology textbooks said that the end-diastolic volume is, in a sense, a workload impressed on the ventricles prior to contraction and is thus referred to as a preload. Why is it incorrect to think of EDV and preload synonymously?
    (1 vote)
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    • blobby green style avatar for user Rhonda Moss
      They are not the same thing. Preload is a measure of pressure on the sarcomeres. It's measured in mmHg, which is force per unit area. Volume is the amount of space something occupies. Preload is related to volume, as you can use volume to calculate radius, which feeds into the preload equation. However, preload isn't equal to volume. It's easier to measure EDV, so people use it in place of preload.
      (4 votes)
  • winston baby style avatar for user AJ
    Why is it called "Preload"? Why not call it "wall-stretch"? I'm trying to make sense out of "preload" and nothing makes sense. Help, anyone?
    (2 votes)
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    • leaf green style avatar for user Joanne
      I agree, 'preload' is not great. But I will try. Preload is the stretch that occurs due to blood volume coming in to the heart, so you could think of it as related to blood volume, that is the load. After-load related to blood vessel resistance, arterial diameter, makes more sense. Do the best you can, for better or worse, these are the terms in use. Good Luck.
      (2 votes)

Video transcript

I'm going to draw on this axis pressure, and on the other axis, I'm going put volume. And we're going to do a little thought experiment. So I'll label it the way I usually do with milliliters, but I'm going to leave off all the numbers, just to make it a little bit easier to see what's going on. So I'm not going to label the axes with numbers. But you get the idea that, of course, pressure is going to go up this way and volumes going to go up that way. Now, let's say I go over to the shelf. Let's say I've got a shelf full of left ventricles, and I just grab the first one that I see. And I pick it up, and it's this little guy over here. And he's empty to start out with, but I start putting some blood in him. It's totally relaxed. This ventricle is not contracted at all, which is important, of course. And I start filling it up a blood. And as I do that, I actually just keep track of how much blood I'm putting in and what the pressure is inside of my left ventricle. And I notice that the pressure is rising as I'm putting more and more blood. In fact, as I really start filling this up, let's say fill that up completely with blood and try to squeeze in even more, as I keep trying to stuff it with blood, I notice that the pressure begins to rise and now kind of rises really fast. So near the end, it starts rising much more quickly. And this is my curve, and I get to name it whatever I want. And so I'm going to call it the end diastolic pressure volume relationship. Now, you might be thinking, well, OK, pressure volume relationship, that part makes sense. But why do I always have to name it end diastolic? Why not just dropped those two words, right? The reason I don't drop those words is because it gives you information. It tells you that it's at the end of diastole that I'm doing this experiment. So, for example, nobody can come by and tell me, well, was there any contraction in this left ventricle of yours? I would say no it was completely relaxed. And I can convey that information just by using the word "end diastolic," because it's understood that if I'm talking about something at the end of diastole, the left ventricle must have been relaxed. And, in fact, one more thing I want to point out-- just because we're talking about interesting points-- is that remember that if this is pressure and volume, that the pressure divided by volume, or the slope of this line, is actually equal to elastance. So if I draw the line a certain way, if I say, for example, what's going on over here? Well, the slope is much higher than it is over here. Another way of saying that is that the elastance of my line is going up over time. So just keep in mind, that the word "elastance" actually completely make sense to use in this context. So now we have our line, or a curve. And I guess one thing we can think about is what would happen if I actually, at this moment-- let's say right here, this blue spot decided to let my heart contract. What would happen if the left ventricle contracted? Well, of course, the pressure would rise, and that's what happens with contraction. But I guess the question is, what were the conditions at the moment? So if I say this is end diastole, right? Because, of course, for this situation-- let's call the situation A-- diastole just ended at that point. What was the volume? And let's say the volume is 125 milliliters, and let's say the pressure is 10 millimeters of mercury. So those are the conditions at the point where I just allowed the left ventricle to contract. Now I can choose another point. I could say, well, what about this point up here? What if I allowed contraction to happen right there? Well, that just means I waited a little bit longer, right? And let's call this situation B. And now the volume is higher, and I'm just going to say 150, even though I guess maybe it looks like my drawing is little skewed. But let's just assume that 150 is that point. And the pressure is just a smidge higher. I'm going to say it's 15 millimeters of mercury, a smidge higher, just a little bit higher. So these are the two points, A and B. So I could say, all right, well, if I want to talk to someone about this, I can say I have pressure and I have volume. And the pressure for situation A-- let's go with A first, of course. A had a pressure of 10 millimeters of mercury and a volume of 125. This is how I could convey information about that spot. And if someone asks me about situation B, I could say, well, situation B had a slightly higher pressure and a slightly higher volume. And really what I'm giving them is information about what the conditions were at the time that contraction began. That's really what that point represents-- conditions when the contraction began. Now you might thin, OK, well, the story is done. What else is there to say? That was very interesting. But, actually, there's another term that people use all the time to describe the conditions when contraction begins. And the most common thing is that people get confused when this word is thrown around. The world is preload. And preload, I think it's really important to define because sometimes people say well preload is pressure at the point the contraction began. And other people say, no, no, no. Preload is volume when contraction began. And I'm going to say that its neither pressure nor volume, but it's something different. I'm going to define preload as being equal to the wall stress. In fact, let me ask you go back one step, half a step maybe. And I'll say not even just wall stress, but I'm going to say left ventricular wall stress when contraction began. But I'm not going to say when contraction began, I'm going to use shorthand. I'm going to say at end diastole. So at the point when diastole ended, and in situation A and B those were two different points, we just said, the point where diastole ends, whatever the left ventricular wall stress is at that moment is preload. So that's how I'm going to define preload. And that's the way I think it's most helpful to define preload. But, of course, preload has a lot to do with pressure and volume. It's not like it's got nothing to do with those terms at all. Let me make a little bit of space, and build out my argument, and see If I can try to convince you that what I'm saying make sense. So to understand this, you've got to remember what wall stress is. Remember Laplace had this law, and he said wall stress is equal to P, pressure, times the radius divided by 2 times the wall thickness. w is wall thickness, right? And remember, Laplace was not working with left ventricles like we are. He was working with spheres. So he was working with something that looked a little bit more like this. He was saying, OK, well, if you have a sphere, this is your sphere. I'm going to try to draw it as best I can. Then if you actually take a look at the inside of that sphere-- let's say you take that sphere, and now I'm going to just chop away half of it. Let's say you just cut away the top half, just look at the mid section of that sphere. He said what you would notice is on the inside-- I'm going to draw it with a white line. On the inside, you've got a doughnut. You've got something like this. And then you could actually look at it, and you would see this. You would see that if you look down at it, this doughnut begins to look a little bit like this. So Laplace said if you have a situation where you have some sort of a sphere, and you can actually open up and look at it, well, then you can actually start making some interesting observations. You could say, well, from this point to this point-- let's call this the radius of the inside. I'm going to call it radius IN. And then from this point to this point, right here to here, we are going to call that w, or wall thickness, we said. And then if you combine those, you get the total radius. So he said R-total equals radius of the inside plus wall thickness, something like that. And remember now-- and then, of course, after mention of pressure, you might be thinking, oh, where does pressure fit into all this? Pressure is just kind of what's forcing out on the walls. That is pressure. But now, remember, there's a relationship, an interesting relationship, between volume and radius of the inside. So there's volume equals 4/3 pi r cubed. And in this case, when we say r, I mean radius on the inside. So I should say r inside. I wrote lowercase r, but let me just make it really easy but just writing the uppercase R. So that's the relationship. So If you want to move things around, you can actually say, OK, well, then radius on the inside is simply the cube root of-- and then you flip around all of the equation, right? You say, OK, 3 over 4 pi, and this is v for volume. And now if you have the volume information, you can figure out the radius of the inside. So we can actually do that. We can say what is the radius on the inside? Well, if these are the volumes-- I actually calculated this beforehand so I wouldn't have to sit here and take the cube root of stuff, while you wait patiently for me-- you can actually calculate this stuff and say, OK, if I have 125 milliliters, then the radius on the inside ends up being what? It ends up being about 3.1 centimeters. And remember, you might think, well, how in the world do you get from milliliters to centimeters? Remember that 1 milliliter-- and I'll just write it here. 1 milliliter equals 1 cubic centimeter. Actually, that's nice because then when you to take the cube root, you get centimeters left behind. So that's the situation A. In situation B, if I plug in 150 into this equation, then I get that my radius on the inside becomes 3.3 centimeters. And then I could also do the next variable. I could do wall thickness. And for this I just assume-- and this is a fair assumption-- that my left ventricle is really not going to change a whole lot from heartbeat to heartbeat, and that, in general, given my size and my weight, I'm going to have a wall thickness of let's say about 1 centimeter just to make the math kind of easy. And so then the final variable we need is the total radius, which is simply the radius on the inside plus the wall thickness. So this is just adding those two numbers together. So I just add those very easily and say, OK, well, the total radius is just 4.1 centimeters. This will be 4.3 centimeters. And then finally, we can calculate preload now. You can just take all these numbers and say Mr. Laplace asked me for pressure. I got it right there. Mr. Laplace asked me for my total radius, and I got it right there. And Mr. Laplace asked me for my wall thickness, and I got it right there. So all of the things that we need to calculate wall stress at the end of diastole-- of course, that's really important; we have those number at the end of diastole-- we have them. And so we can actually calculate preload, which is so cool, which actually makes it, just instead of a word we throw down, it's actually something you can quantify. So let's go through it, and let's calculate it. Let's do situation A first. In situation A, I'm just going to write A now again. We have 10 times 4.1. So that's 41 divided by 2 times 1. So that ends up being-- I'm just going to give you a round number. This is about 21 millimeters of mercury. So preload, another interesting thing about it, it's measured in pressure units. And in situation B, we got 15 times 4.3 again divided by 2 times 1. So that math works out to 32, right? 32. Again, I'm rounding off, so 32 millimeters of mercury. And so you can actually see that going from situation A to situation B-- and actually let me just draw on my doughnut here what the wall stress is. Remember, wall stress is actually the force over area pulling the heart muscle apart. And that makes sense, right? In the beginning of contraction when the heart is about to contract, how much stress is there on the wall? That is your preload. And, of course, it takes into account things like pressure and volume, of course. And you can now say to someone, yeah, we went from a preload of 21 millimeters of mercury right here to a preload of 32 millimeters of mercury right here. And that's actually a very rarely done calculation, but I think a very valuable one.