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The Circulatory System Chapter 38
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The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Jan 02, 2016

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Page 1: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

The Circulatory System

Chapter 38

Page 2: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

• BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Page 3: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Transport and Distribution

• Includes the lymphatic and cardiovascular systems.

• Acts as a highway, connecting the muscles and organs of the body.

Page 4: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

A muscular pump• The human heart has two separate

circulatory loops, the right side of the heart is responsible for driving the pulmonary loop, which pumps oxygen-poor blood through the pulmonary arteries, to the lungs. In the lungs the blood gets oxygen and is returned to the left side of the heart by the pulmonary veins.

• The left side of the heart is responsible for driving the systemic loop, which pumps oxygen rich blood through the arteries to the tissues of the body. The oxygen poor blood is then returned to the right side of the heart through the veins.

Page 5: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

5 Types of molecules that move through the cardiovascular system.

1. Nutrients from digested food.

2. Oxygen from the lungs, transported to all blood vessels.

3. Metabolic wastes (carbon dioxide)

4. Hormones

5. Distributes heat to maintain homeostasis.

Page 6: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Blood Vessels

Blood – tissue composed of fluid, cells and cell fragments

3 different types

1. Arteries

2. Capillaries

3. Veins

Page 7: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Arteries

• Carry blood AWAY from the heart

• Very forceful

• Walls made of elastic

Page 8: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Capillaries

• Very tiny – one cell thick

• Transfers gases, nutrients and hormones as well as carbon dioxide.

Page 9: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Veins

• Largest type of blood vessel

• Have valves to prevent backflow and allow blood to travel up hill.

• Carry blood TOWARD the heart

Page 10: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

The Lymphatic System

• Collects and recycles fluids leaked from the cardiovascular system

• Helps fight infections

• Leaky fluid is called lymph

Page 11: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

The Components of Blood: Plasma

• Makes up 60% of blood

• Made up of 90% water and 10% metabolites, wastes, salt and proteins.

• Fluid portion that suspends the blood cells.

Page 12: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Red Blood Cells

• Most numerous• Carry oxygen• Also called

erthrocytes• Packed with

hemoglobin• Produced in the

Page 13: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

White Blood Cells

• Also called leukocytes

• Primary job is to

fight disease

• Large and have

a nucleus

Page 14: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Platelets

• Formed in bone marrow

• Help clot blood• People with

hemophilia lack platelets

Page 15: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Hemoglobin

• Iron containing proteins

• Found in RED BLOOD CELLS

• Binds oxygen in the lungs and transports it to the tissues

Page 16: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Blood Types

• A, B, AB, O

• Letter A and B stand for carbohydrates found on the surface of blood cells.

• Act as antigens

• Blood contains antigens and antibodies

Page 17: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Blood Types

O is the universal donor because it does not carry any antigensAB is the universal recipient because they do not have any antibodies

Page 18: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

RH factor

• Antigen found on red blood cells

• Can cause problems in pregnancy

Page 19: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Circulation of blood

• Mammalian hearts have 4 chambers.• The two upper are called atria.• The two lower are called ventricles.• Each chamber is divided by a septum,

keeps oxygen poor blood from mixing with oxygen rich blood.

• The protective coat surrounding the heart is called the pericardium.

• Walls of the heart are made of a thick layer of muscle called the myocardium.

Page 20: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

The Human Heart

Page 21: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Right atrium

• Contains cells that make up the sinoatrial node or “pacemaker”.

Page 22: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Blood Pressure

• Force exerted by blood as it moves through blood vessels.

• First number is systolic – pressure exerted when the heart contracts

• Second number is diastolic- when the heart relaxes

• Normal 120/80• Lower in veins than in arteries• Kidneys aid in regulating blood pressure• Too high - hypertension

Page 23: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Pulse

• Caused by contractions in the left ventricle.

• Indicator of heart rate

• Average is 70-90 beats per minute

Page 24: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Mapping Your Valves: Class Activity

• By applying pressure to your arm, you can locate the valves in the veins of your arm.

.

Page 25: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

PROCEDURE:

1. Have a classmate make a fist and extend his or her arm, with the hand palm up and slightly below elbow level. Locate a prominent vein on the inside of the forearm. Using one finger, press down on the vein at a point near the wrist to block the blood flow.

2. Gently place a second finger along the vein about 5 cm from the first finger (toward the elbow). Release the second finger, but not the first. The vein should refill partway. Mark this point, which indicates the location of a valve, with the pen. You may have to try more than one vein to locate a valve.

Page 26: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Discussion Questions : Answer on your own sheet of paper.

1. IDENTIFY the direction blood flows in the vein you chose.

2. PROPOSE why the subject must make a fist and hold his arm slightly down.

3. INFER what effect standing in one place for long periods of time might have on the veins in the legs.

Page 27: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

Directed Reading: The Heart

1.Describe the path blood follows through the pulmonary circulation loop.

Oxygen poor blood is pumped from the heart to the lungs through the pulmonary arteries. The blood gains oxygen in the lungs and is returned to the heart through the pulmonary veins.

Page 28: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

2. Describe the path blood follows through the systemic circulation loop.

Oxygen rich blood is pumped from the heart to the lungs through the pulmonary arteries. Oxygen poor blood is then returned to the heart through the veins.

Page 29: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

3. B

4. F

5. A

6. G

7. D

8. E

9. C

10.1

Page 30: The Circulatory System Chapter 38. BEGIN labeling the heart using page 945 in your book.

1,3,6,5,7,8,4,2

Vena cavae (vein) > rt. Atrium > rt.

Ventricle (low in oxygen) > pulmonary

Arteries (away) > lungs (get oxygen) >

Pulmonary veins > left atrium > left

Ventricle > aorta (artery – away) > body

Coronary arteries