- Carries nutrients throughout body
- Transports Oxygen and CDide
- Transports horomones
- Transports waste from cells to kidneys
- Maintains body temp
- Carries Antibodies
Heart : Muscular Organ
Blood Vessels : Arteries, Veins, Capillaries
Blood : Plasma, RBC, WBC, platelets
1. Open Circulatory System:
- Blood called hemolymph, flows freely in body cavity
- Found in invertebrates, Insects
2. Closed Circutlatory System
- Blood contained in vessels
- Found in veterbrates, earthworms, squid.
- Made up of cardiac muscle
- Pumps rhythmically and involuntarily without fatiuge
- Pumps in one direction only
- Seperated oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor blood
- Right side of heart reveives deoxygenated blood coming back from the heart.
- Left side of heart pumps oxygenated blood fowards the rest of the body.
- Pulmonary Arteries carries deoxygenated blood from the heart towards the lungs, (Co2 is released and o2 is picked up).
- Pulmonary Veins carries fresh, oxygenated blood from lungs to heart.
- Atria receive blood (upper chambers) Ventricles squeeze blood out (lower chambers)
- Valves seperate the different chambers: of ventricular valves and semilunar valves.
Arteries : carry blood away from heart, small arteries called arterioles.
Veins : Carry blood towards the heart, small vience called venules.
Capillaries : Smallest blood vessels that connect arterioles and venules.
- Thick, highly elastic muscular walls
- Generally carry oxygen rich blood away from heart and throughout the body (pulmonary arteries are an exception, carry o2 poor blood away from heart to lungs)
- Blood is under high pressure
- Generally buried deep in body, except carotid artery in neck
-Thinner, less muscular less elastic walls
- Contains valves, which ensure blood flow one way.
- Carry oxygen deficient blood towards theart (pulmonary veins are the exception, carry oxygen rich blood from the lungs to the heart)
- Blood is under lower pressure
- Located closer to the surface of body
- Once cell thick
- Allows for gas and nutrient molecules to pass through by diffusion
- Allows for only one RBC to flow through in single file fashion
- Pulmonary Circulation ; blood movement between heart and lungs.
- Systemic Circulation ; Blood movement between heart and rest of the body.
- Cardiac Circulation ; Blood movement throughout heart tissue itself.
- Average 70kg person has 5L of blood
- Plasma (55%)
- White Blood cells and platelets (<1%)
- Red Blood cells (45%)
- Clear yellowish
- 92% water - dissolves and transports
- 7% blood protiens (albumin, globulin, fibrinogen)
- 1% organic and inorganic substances (sodium, potassium. chloride, bicarbonate)
- Also called erythorcytes
- Disk shaped, no nucleus (cells made in bone marrow) small enough to pass through capillaries
- Contains hemoglobin (iron) and used for oxygen transport
- Life span is 120 days
- Also called leukocytes
- Used in fighting infection
- Have nucleus and are colourless
- 5 main types (neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils, lymphocytes, monocytes)
- Also called thrombocytes
- Fragments of longer cells from bone marrow much smaller than RBC
- Do not contain nucleui and breakdown within 7-10 days
- Main function is combining with blood protiens to clot blood.
- Blood types are determained by precense of special antigens (protiens) on surface of RBC
- Rh factor can be + or -, also determained by presence of specefic Rh antigen (protien)
- Antibodies against certain antigens can also be found in certain blood types
- Incompatible blood types agglutinate
Transports : nutrients, gases, chemicals, wastes
Temp Regulation : warms body thorugh vasoconstriction, cools body thorugh vasodilation
- Heart is a mygenic muscle can be activated in absence of external nerves
- Heartbeat tempo set by sinoatrial node and atrioventricular node
- SA node causes atria to contract then AV node sends impulse to purkinjre fibres to make the ventricles contract.
- ECG (electrocardiogram) measures electrical impulses in the heart.
- P wave : SA node fires, ventricles contract and AV valves
- QRS complex : AV node fires, ventricles contract, and AV walves close, "lub"
- T-Wave : ventricles relax semilunar valves close "dub"
- Changes of blood pressure correlates to phases of hearbeat
- Caused by cardial output and arterial resistance
- Meausured with a sphygmomanometer
- Normal blood pressure is 110-140\70-90
- Top number is Systolic presssure, bottom number is calles diastolic pressure
- Cardiac output indicates amount of oxygen deliverd to body
- Cardiac output determined by heart rate and stroke volume or HR x SN
- Carda output depends on persons cardio vascular fitness.
1. Arteriosclerosis
2. Angioplasty
3. Cornoary Bypass
4. Aneurysm
5. Heart Valve Disease
6. Arhythmia
7. Stroke
- General term term to describe the conditions that cause hardening of the arteries
- Most common type is atherosclerosis (plaque builds up and hardens to cause lower blood flow and higher blood pressure)
- Most dangerious in the arteries that supply the heart, brain, legs, and kidneys
- Prevention includes ; regular exercise, no smoking, eatingh fruits and veggies
- Treatments include ; Asprin to thin the blood, angioplasty or coronary bypass.
- Insertion of small tube with inflating ballon to force artery to open
- Involves talking a healthy vein or artery fromi another part of the body and re-route blood flow to bypass the blocked vessel.
- Can be single, double, triple or quaduple bypass, depending on how many new, detours are being made.
- A bulge in an artery due to weak arterial wall area
- It can grow until it burts, which may lead to interanl bleeding and\or death
- Treatments ; surgery to replace damaged vessel portion with a pacth of synthetic material.
- Occurs when valves dont fully close and backwashes occurs, called regurgitation
- If valve gets narrowed, thickend, and or scarred then its called stenosis.
- Irregularity with heartbeat
- May be harmless or can interfere with proiper blood flow to brain or other organs
- Pacemakers may be inserted to monitor, control and correct abnormla rhythm with electrical impulses
- Heart problems present since birth
- Common ore is heart murmur
- Results when blood flow to brain is cut off due to orterial damage.
- Lack of oxygen may lead to paralysis and or deawth
- Ischemic stroke ; clot\blockage is blood vessel
- Hemorrhagic Stroke ; Blood vessel in brain burts
- treatments must begin ASAP clotbuster medication, surgery or non-surgical procedures to prevent damage or death.
Angiography : Liquid dye injected into artery, then X-ray the flow
Echocardiagram : Ultrasound gives images of heart and its movements
Electrocardiogram : Meusures hearts electrical activity, blood pressure heart rate
Holter Monitor : Records heart rythm over the course of a day.
- Hemophilia : Blood clotting disorder
- Anemia : lack of normal RBC or low hemoglobin, or low iron levels
- Leukemia : Cancer of the WBC results in too many WBC which are immature and unable to fight infection, and less RBC which leads to anemia and fatigue
