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Baroreceptor Regulation of Renal Function

  • Chapter
Baroreceptor Reflexes

Abstract

Describing a convincingly simple model for the cardiovascular system Ernst H. Weber (1850) was probably the first to recognize that an adequate filling available to the heart is a basic requirement for a functioning circulation. His simple model [1,49,97,189] (Fig. 1) has three essential parts: (1) a pump (left ventricle), (2) a high flow resistance section, and (3) two vascular compartments with highly different compliances (low pressure system and arterial system). With the pump at rest the hydrostatic pressure is the same in both compartments; it is a function of the blood volume within the system.

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Kirchheim, H.R. (1991). Baroreceptor Regulation of Renal Function. In: Persson, P.B., Kirchheim, H.R. (eds) Baroreceptor Reflexes. Springer, Berlin, Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-76366-3_7

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