There's a comment in TBR that goes, "The lower blood pressure in a narrowing artery can be low enough to do more than offset [the high blood pressure associated with artherosclerosis]."
Can someone please explain this comment?
(You'll notice that I used brackets to summarize a longer quote. If you would like to read the original here it is: "You may have guessed that the pressure should increase because of the high blood pressure associated with artherosclerosis. The heart of one afflicted with atherosclerosis pumps with a greater pressure to keep the blood volumetric flow rate at healthy levels, increasing the total pressure throughout the arteries. However the pressure is lower in an unhealthy section of an artery than it is in a nearby healthy section because of the flow speed increase. This comparison was the thrust of this question. As an aside, the lower pressure in the narrowing artery can be low enough to do more than offset the increased pumping pressure of the heart, making the arterial pressure lower than that in a healthy individual's artery.")
Can someone please explain this comment?
(You'll notice that I used brackets to summarize a longer quote. If you would like to read the original here it is: "You may have guessed that the pressure should increase because of the high blood pressure associated with artherosclerosis. The heart of one afflicted with atherosclerosis pumps with a greater pressure to keep the blood volumetric flow rate at healthy levels, increasing the total pressure throughout the arteries. However the pressure is lower in an unhealthy section of an artery than it is in a nearby healthy section because of the flow speed increase. This comparison was the thrust of this question. As an aside, the lower pressure in the narrowing artery can be low enough to do more than offset the increased pumping pressure of the heart, making the arterial pressure lower than that in a healthy individual's artery.")