Circulatory System. The Circulatory System Made up of 3 main parts: heart, blood, and blood vessels Functions of the body’s delivery system – Delivers.
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Circulatory System
The Circulatory System
• Made up of 3 main parts: heart, blood, and blood vessels
• Functions of the body’s delivery system– Delivers oxygen, nutrients,
hormones, water, etc. throughout the body, and removing waste.
Components of Blood• Plasma: colorless liquid that makes up most of the
blood• Red blood cells: actually make the blood look red– They deliver oxygen to cells throughout the body
• White blood cells: part of immune system• Platelets: help with clotting and repair after injury
Plasma• Plasma is the liquid component of
your blood• Plasma makes up just about half
your blood• Contains proteins, minerals, and
sugars your cells use as nutrients as well
• Since this is the liquid aspect of your blood, this is what actually carries things like the red blood cells, platelets, white blood cells, etc.
• Plasma is made in the liver– Yet another reason why you don’t want
to drink so much you get a cirrhotic liver
Red Blood Cells AKA Erythrocytes• Carry oxygen and carbon dioxide–Oxygen from lungs diffuses into hemoglobin of
RBC–deliver it to all the cells in the body–Once O2 is dropped off, RBCs pick up the carbon
dioxide waste produced in cellular respiration–CO2 is transported back to the lungs where gas
exchange occurs and you breathe it out• Crazy fact: there are roughly 5,000,000 RBCs in ONE
drop of blood!!
White Blood Cells AKA Leukocytes
• about 1% blood's volume• lymphocytes are a major part of the immune
system • granulocytes and macrophages protect our
bodies from infection by surrounding and destroying bacteria, viruses, fungi, or other parasites. They also have the function of getting rid of old, unneeded blood cells as well as foreign matter such as dust and asbestos.
Platelets AKA Thrombocytes• Blood cells that help stop bleeding– Platelets stick to the sides of ruptured areas in
blood vessels to block blood from leaving the vessel– This is eventually what forms a scab, which we will
learn about next!
Coagulation• When a vessel gets ruptured in some way, platelets are the
first responders• Platelets gather at the opening of the blood vessel• These platelets send out a chemical message that attracts
other platelets, so the opening of the blood vessel starts becoming filled with platelets
• This aggregation of platelets attracts other clotting factors like fibrin and thrombin
Scabs• The fibrin forms a mesh-like net over the
opening and traps red blood cells as they try to leak out of the cut. As the clot hardens, it forms a protective seal over the cut.– This is a scab!
Blood Vessels• 3 Types:• Arteries are blood vessels that carry oxygen rich
blood AWAY from the heart. • Aorta is the largest, Arterioles are the smallest
They contain muscular walls (smooth muscle) that contract to aid in blood movement.
• Capillaries are smallest blood vessels as thin or thinner than the hairs on your head. Capillaries connect arteries to veins. Food substances (nutrients), oxygen and wastes pass in and out of your blood through the capillary walls.
• Veins carry blood back toward your heart. They contain valves to prevent backflow (due to gravity)
• Vena Cava are largest, Venules are smallest
Human Heart Facts
• Women hearts beat faster than men.• Three years after a person quits smoking,
their chance of having a heart attack is the same as someone who has never smoked before.
• The human heart weighs less than a pound.• The human heart can create enough
pressure that it could squirt blood at a distance of thirty feet.
• The right lung of a human is larger than the left one. This is because of the space and placement of the heart.
• The human heart beats roughly 35 million times a year.
• In a lifetime, the heart pumps about one million barrels of blood.
Structures of the Heart• The heart has – 2 sides, a left and a right– 4 chambers: 2 atrium and
2 ventricles• The atrium are located
next to each other in the top half (base) of the heart while the ventricles are located next to each other in the bottom half (apex) of the heart
Valves• There are 4 valves in the
heart to prevent backflow:– tricuspid valve connects the
right halves of the heart; – bicuspid valve or Mitral
connects the left halves of the heart
– Pulmonary valve leads to the lungs
– Aortic valve leads to body
Main Veins and Arteries of the Heart
• Aorta: the large artery coming out of the heart– Brings nutrient rich/oxygenated blood from the
heart to the rest of the body• Pulmonary artery/trunk: connects the heart
to the lungs, brings blood from the heart to the lungs to get oxygenated– This is the only artery that carries
DEOXYGENATED blood!!
• Pulmonary veins: bring the oxygenated blood back into the heart
• Vena Cava: “Heart’s Veins”– Superior: brings blood in to the heart from the
upper half of the body– Inferior: brings blood in to the heart from the
lower half of the body; is located beneath the superior
Blood Flow through the Heart• Right side: First the deoxygenated blood enters
the heart through the inferior and superior vena cava– Flows into the right atrium – From the right atrium, it passes through the
tricuspid valve and then into the right ventricle – The blood is then pumped through the pulmonary
valve into the pulmonary artery and into the lungs
• Once in the lungs, carbon dioxide is removed and oxygen is added to the blood.
• Left side: The pulmonary vein empties oxygen-rich blood, from the lungs, into the left atrium. – From here, the blood flows from your left atrium
into your left ventricle through the open bicuspid valve
– Finally, it is pumped through the aortic valve into the aorta - the blood vessel that feeds all of the other parts of your body.
• This website animates the flow of blood through the heart
http://www.heartpoint.com/theheart.html
Lub-Dub“Lub”
• The atria and ventricles work together by alternately contracting (squeezing) and relaxing to pump blood through your heart
• Blood initially comes into your right atrium, so this fills with blood
• This causes the tricuspid valve to open so the blood can flow to the right ventricle
• At the same time, the oxygenated blood from the lungs is coming into the left atrium
• This causes the bicuspid valve to open so blood can flow to the left ventricle
• As soon as the atria are empty, the tri- and bi- cuspid valves must close very quickly
• This is what makes the “Lub” sound
Lub-Dub“Dub”
• Once the right ventricle is filled with blood, this causes the pulmonary valve to open so that blood can flow to the lungs
• At the same time, blood from the left ventricle passes through the aortic valve to go into the aorta and then through the rest of the body
• Once the blood is out of the heart, either to the lungs or the aorta, these valves must snap close to that blood doesn’t get back into the heart
• This is the “Dub” sound
Heart Conduction• The heart must contract in an
orderly manner…have rhythm• In the top right atrium,
there is a bundle of neurons called the Sinoatrial (SA) node– This is the heart’s natural
pacemaker that fires at regular intervals, telling the heart when to beat
– It sends an electrical impulse down the heart, triggering a sequence of electrical events
Heart Conduction cont…
• The SA node passes this electrical signal through the atria, and then to the Atrioventricular (AV) node, which passes the signal to the ventricles
• Wave of contraction (electrical event): atria first, then ventricles.
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