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Cardiovascular System. I. System Anatomy  Heart  Pumps Blood  Blood Vessels  Deliver blood to cells.

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Presentation on theme: "Cardiovascular System. I. System Anatomy  Heart  Pumps Blood  Blood Vessels  Deliver blood to cells."— Presentation transcript:

1 Cardiovascular System

2 I. System Anatomy  Heart  Pumps Blood  Blood Vessels  Deliver blood to cells

3 II. System Physiology  Transports oxygen, nutrients, hormones, carbon dioxide, waste products and other substances

4 III. Heart  Size of your fist  Weighs less than 1 pound  Made of Cardiac Muscle Tissue  Has 4 chambers  Right Atrium – receives blood from body  Right Ventricle – pumps blood to lungs  Left Atrium – receives blood from lungs  Left Ventricle – pumps blood to body (most muscular part)

5 Superior Vena Cava Right Pulmonary Artery Right Atrium Tricuspid Valve Right Pulmonary Veins Right Ventricle Inferior Vena Cava Aorta Left Pulmonary Artery Left Atrium Bicuspid/Mitral Valve Left Ventricle Septum Pulmonary Valve Aortic Valve Left Pulmonary veins

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7 Path of Blood  1. Superior and Inferior Vena Cava  2. Right Atrium  3. Tricuspid Valve  4. Right Ventricle  5. Pulmonary Valve  6. Right/Left Pulmonary Arteries  7. Lungs – get rid of Carbon Dioxide, Pick up Oxygen  8. Pulmonary Veins

8 Path of Blood (cont)  9. Left Atrium  10. Bicuspid/Mitral Valve  11. Left Ventricle  12. Aortic Valve  13. Aorta  14. Arteries  15. Capillaries – give oxygen to cells, pick up carbon dioxide  16. Veins  Again!!

9 IV. Heart Physiology  Heart pumps entire volume of blood 1000 times per day around the body  Double Pump System  Right Side – Pulmonary Circuit – pumps blood to lungs to pick up oxygen and get rid of carbon dioxide  Left Side – Systemic Circuit – pumps blood to body – brings oxygen to cells and picks up carbon dioxide

10 Heart Physiology (cont)  Valves  Let blood flow in one direction only (prevent backflow) 1. AV valves – Tricuspid and Bicuspid – between atrium and ventricle Make first sound of heart beat (lub) 2. Pulmonary and Aortic Valves Make second sound of heart beat (dup)

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12 Heart Physiology (cont)  Cardiac muscle is involuntary  Must have a control system to coordinate the heart beat  Pacemaker – sets the pace for the heart and coordinates the beats  Also called the Sinoatrial node  Approximate average heart rate is 75 bpm (beats per minute)

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14 Cardiac Cycle  Diastole  Heart relaxation  Pressure in heart is low  Bicuspid/Tricuspid are open  Pulmonary and Aortic Valves are Closed  Blood flowing from atrium to ventricle

15 Cardiac Cycle (cont)  Systole  Heart Contraction (pumping)  Pressure in heart is high  Bicuspid/Tricuspid valves are closed  Aortic and Pulmonary valves are open  Blood is being pumped to lungs and body

16 Blood Vessels  Transport blood from heart throughout the body  Can have up to three layers  Tunica intima – inner layer – made of squamous epithelial tissue  Tunica media – middle layer – made of smooth muscle tissue  Tunica externa – outer layer – made of fibrous connective tissue

17 Arteries  Carry blood AWAY from the heart  Have Thick walls due to high pressure of blood  Have all three layers  Expand as blood is pumped  You can feel a pulse in your arteries

18 Veins  Carry blood TOWARDS the heart  Pressure is lower than in arteries  Have thinner walls  Have VALVES to prevent backflow of blood  Usually blood tests are done with blood from the veins

19 Capillaries  Very thin  One have inner layer (tunica intima)  Come into contact with cells  Link between arteries and veins  Site of gas (oxygen and carbon dioxide) and nutrient exchange with cells

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21 Atrial Pulse  Expanding and recoil of arteries that occur with each beat of heart  Average 70 to 76 bpm  Don’t use your thumb when taking pulse measurements – you’re thumb has its own pulse

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23 Blood Pressure  Pressure the blood exerts on inner walls of blood vessels  Keeps blood circulating in between heartbeats  Arteries closest to heart have highest pressure

24 Measuring Blood pressure  Systolic pressure  Number when you first hear sounds  Ventricle is contracting  Diastolic pressure  Number when sounds stop  When ventricles are relaxing

25 Measuring Blood Pressure  Put cuff with stethoscope over the brachial artery  Close valve and inflate cuff to 160 mmHg – DO NOT GO HIGHER THAN 160 (you are cutting off the circulation to the artery)  Slowly release air and listen for a sound like a heart beat  Record the number at the first soft tapping sound  Sounds will get louder and then decrease  Record the number when the sound stops (blood is flowing freely)

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27 Factors that Affect blood pressure  Normal range: Systolic 110 – 130mmHg; Diastolic 70-80mmHg  Many factors affect blood pressure  Age  Temperature  Cold – constricts blood vessels = increase in bp  Warm – dilates blood vessels = decrease in bp  Diet  Clogged arteries  Physical Activity

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29 Factors that Affect blood pressure  Chemicals  Epinephrine (Adrenaline) increases blood pressure  Nicotine increases due to constricting of veins  Alcohol and histamine decrease due to dilation of veins

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