Do Now 3/5 WOD: NOCTURNAL (nawk TUR nul) adj. of or occurring at night

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Cardiovascular System
Advertisements

NOVEMBER 8, 2011 CAPE BIOLOGY UNIT II OMAR WRIGHT.
Circulatory System of a Mammal
Common Requirements of living things - ANIMALS – Chapter 5 Pt B.
Blood Vessels and the Heart
ACCESS HE Human Biology.
blood from the heart gets around the body through blood vessels
Cardiovascular System heart and blood vessels. Systemic Circulation – delivers blood to all body cells and carries away waste Pulmonary Circulation –
Topic 6.2 The Transport System
The Transport System Chapter 42 & IB topic 6.2. The transport system  Mammals have a closed circulation Blood is pumped by the heart and circulated in.
S. MORRIS Main functions: 1.Transports gases (from the respiratory system), nutrient molecules and waste materials (from the digestive system) 2.Regulates.
The Heart The heart or cardiac muscle is a hollow cone shaped muscular organ that is divided into four chambers. The heart straddles the midline within.
The Closed Circulatory System Humans have a closed circulatory system, typical of all vertebrates, in which blood is confined to vessels and is distinct.
Chapter 11 The Cardiovascular System. The Cardiovascular System  A closed system of the heart and blood vessels  The heart pumps blood  Blood vessels.
The Heart 1 Cardiovascular System, pt. 1 (Chapter 9)
Unit 1&2 Anatomy and physiology
The Circulatory System Section Functions of the Circulatory System Needed because the body has millions of cells. Transports nutrients, oxygen,
The Circulatory System – The Heart
Cardiovascular System APL2/L3.  Consists of: -a muscular pump, heart -a system of distribution vessels, arteries, veins and capillaries -a circulating.
The Heart GR 12 A General functions of the cardiovascular system 1. Transports nutrients and oxygen to the cells 2. Removes carbon dioxide and waste.
The mammalian cardiovascular system.  Made up of a pump (heart) and system of interconnecting tubes (blood vessels)  Closed system: blood always remains.
The Circulatory System
Circulation. The circulatory system acts as a transportation network for our cells and tissues It supplies nutrients and removes wastes It is km.
CIRCULATORY SYSTEM The highway system of the body.
Cardiovascular System. Functions of the Cardiovascular System Supply all body tissues with oxygen and nutrients Transport cellular waste products to the.
Chapter 11: Circulations and Blood Vessels
Circulatory System Consists of… Blood Vessels Blood Heart.
Cardiovascular System. Role of the Cardiovascular System the body’s delivery service the body’s delivery service the heart pumps blood through the blood.
The Transport System IB topic 6.2. The transport system  Mammals have a closed circulation Blood is pumped by the heart and circulated in a continuous.
Cardiovascular System. I. System Anatomy  Heart  Pumps Blood  Blood Vessels  Deliver blood to cells.
The Cardiovascular System. Cardiovascular System  Function: transportation  Blood in the transport vehicle  Carries oxygen, nutrients, cell wastes,
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM Blood Vessels. BLOOD VESSELS Arteries function to carry blood away from heart Arteries function to carry blood away from heart The.
The Circulatory System
Chapter 11 The Cardiovascular System. The Cardiovascular System  A closed system of the heart and blood vessels  The heart pumps blood  Blood vessels.
Blood Vessels & Circulation
DO NOW 2/26 Describe the structure and function of the collagen protein.
Angiography. The circulatory system The circulatory system is responsible for the transport of water and dissolved materials throughout the body, including.
Circulatory System.
Anatomy-Cardiovascular System
Circulatory system.
Mammalian Transport System
33.1 The Circulatory System
Functions of the Cardiovascular System
External Anatomy of the Heart
Cardiovascular System
THE HEART LUNGS: Gas exchange
Circulation and Respiration
Cardiovascular System
Internal Transport in Mammals
Circulatory System.
Blood Vessels Blood circulates inside the blood vessels which form a closed transport system called the vascular system. The vascular system consists of:
Blood Vessels Compare the structure and function of blood vessels. (GLOs: D1, E1) Examples: diameter, elasticity, muscle layers, valves, what they transport.
Blood Vessels and their Functions
Coronary Circulation Chapter 12.
Circulatory System of a Mammal
Cardiovascular System Structure of the Heart
Chapter 8.1: The mammalian cardiovascular system
Anatomy-Cardiovascular System
How Blood Moves as it Travels Through the Body
Chapter 30 – Respiratory & Circulatory Systems
Cardiovascular system - Blood Vessels Chapter 13
March 7, 2016 Journal: Paul gets into a car accident and loses a lot of blood. He needs to have a blood transfusion to replace the lost blood. If his.
The Cardiovascular System
The Transport System IB topic 6.2.
Cardiovascular System
Cardiovascular System
Unit J. Circulation and Blood .
The Cardiovascular System
Bell work 1/10/13 Which parts of the heart pump blood into the…
Chapter 46 – Circulatory & Respiratory Systems
Presentation transcript:

Do Now 3/5 WOD: NOCTURNAL (nawk TUR nul) adj. of or occurring at night NOCTURNAL animals sleep during the day and are active at night. A NOCTURNAL person is one who stays up late at night. DIURNAL, which means of or occurring during the day, is the opposite of NOCTURNAL.

Chapter 8.1: The mammalian cardiovascular system

Cardiovascular system Made up of a pump (heart) and system of interconnecting tubes (blood vessels) Closed system: blood always remains within vessels

Blood circulation Blood travels twice through the heart to complete one “circuit” through the body, known as double circulation Systemic circulation: oxygen-rich blood circulation throughout body Pulmonary circulation: oxygen deficient blood circulation between the lungs

The mammalian heart

Systemic circulation Oxygen-rich blood is pumped out of the left atrium via the left atrioventricular valve (aka bicuspid or mitral valve) into the left ventricle It is pumped into the aorta via the aortic semilunar valve (aka aortic valve) and travels to all parts of the body Returns to the right side of the heart via the vena cava

Pulmonary circulation Oxygen-deficient blood is returned to right atrium via the vena cava Pumped into right ventricle via the right atrioventricular valve (aka tricuspid valve) Pumped through pulmonary artery via the right semilunar valve (aka pulmonary valve)

Blood vessels Arteries: always carry blood AWAY from the heart (can be oxygenated/deoxygenated) Veins: always carry blood TOWARDS the heart (can be oxygenated/deoxygenated) Capillaries: link systemic arteries to veins. Responsible for carrying blood to individual cells

Arteries Function: transport blood (swiftly at high pressures) to tissues Walls made up of 3 basic layers: inner endothelium, middle tunica media, outer tunica extrema

Endothelium Inner lining tissue of arteries and veins made up of a layer of flat (squamous epithelium)cells fitting together like a puzzle Aka tunica intima Very smooth: minimizes friction with moving blood Contains elastic fibers

Tunica media Middle layer of veins/arteries containing smooth muscle, collagen, and elastic fibers

Tunica externa Outer layer of veins/arteries containing elastic fibers and collagen

Arterial pressure Blood leaving heart is very high (~120mm Hg or 15kPa during systole) To withstand such pressure, arterial walls must be very elastic and thick Arteries have the thickest walls of any blood vessels

Arterial pressure Walls of arteries have high levels of elastic fibers and collagen to allow them to ‘give’ which reduces the chance of them bursting Blood is pumped in pulses, so arteries are stretched and blood is pumped through them Closer to the heart= higher pressure & velocity (more elastic fibers) Farther from the heart = lower pressure & velocity (more muscle fibers)

Arterial pressure Arteries expand and contract to normalize pressure Expand = reduce pressure Contract = increase pressure Not 100% effective - feel your radial (wrist) or carotid (neck) artery. You can feel the pulses from your heart expanding and contracting these arteries

Do Now 3/7 NURTURE (NUR chur) v. to nourish, to feed; to educate; to train; to foster Mother birds NURTURE their young. Laura NURTURED the abandoned puppy and kept him as her own. During her first year of college, Elizabeth often called her mother for some NURTURING words.

Arterioles As arteries reach their transport tissues, they narrow into arterioles Similar in composition to arteries, but higher % of smooth muscle Controls volume of blood flowing to a tissue at a given time by expanding/contracting

Capillaries Arterioles continue to branch into the smallest of all blood vessels: capillaries Capillaries function to take blood as close as possible to all cells, allowing rapid transfer of substances between cells and blood Oxygen, nutrients, waste, carbon dioxide

Capillaries Form networks called capillary beds in all body tissues, except the cornea and cartilage hence these tissues will not bleed Your cornea gets oxygen directly from the air

capillaries Small size allows them to bring blood as close as possible to cells in the body Capillaries ~7μm in diameter (same size as red blood cell) Walls are made of single layer of endothelial cells

capillaries Cells in endothelium most often have tiny gaps between them which allow certain components of blood to seep through to body tissues Blood pressure drops immensely across capillaries (~ 33 mmHg)

Veins As blood leaves capillary beds, capillaries gradually re-join with each other, forming larger vessels called venules Venules join to form veins The function of veins is to return blood to the heart

veins Typical venous blood pressure is ~5 mmHg or less This very low pressure means veins don’t need to have as thick walls as arteries Veins have the same 3 layers, but tunica media is much smaller and there are less elastic fibers

veins Since veins are very low pressure, they need assistance from your skeletal muscles to return blood to the heart Veins lie very close to muscle (particularly in lower extremities) so when these muscle contract, the increased pressure pushes venous blood to the heart

veins In addition to skeletal muscle help, veins also contain semilunar valves that prevent the backflow of blood in veins Formed from specialized endothelium tissue

Blood pressure through cardiac cycle