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2 Immagini e concetti della biologia Sylvia S. Mader
Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

3 C5 - Cardiovascular system
Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

4 The circulatory system
The function is to transport O2 and nutrients to the cells of the body and to carry away CO2 and other wastes. To do this, the system must keep blood constantly circulating. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

5 The circulatory system
All vertebrates have a closed circulatory system where blood is transported in vessels, separate from the interstitial fluid. In an open circulatory system (as in arthropods) fluids return to the heart through ostia or open vessels. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

6 Single-loop circulation
Fish have a single-loop circulatory pathway: the heart has a single atrium and a single ventricle. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

7 Two-circuits circulation
Amphibians and most reptiles have a two-circuits circulatory pathway, with the heart divided into two atria and one ventricle. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

8 Two-circuits circulation
Birds and mammals have a two-circuits circulatory pathway with the heart divided into two atria and two ventricles. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

9 The cardiovascular system
A circulatory system consists of a pump (the heart), a fluid (the blood) and a series of blood vessels (the vascular system). All together those elements form the cardiovascular system. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

10 The heart The heart has four chambers: two atria and two ventricles. A cardiac septum separates the heart into right and left halves. right ventricle right atrium left ventricle left atrium septum Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

11 The heart An artery carries blood away from the heart while a vein takes the blood to the heart. Cardiac valves keep blood moving in the correct direction. superior vena cava semilunar valve atrioventricular valve inferior vena cava pulmonary veins pulmonary artery aorta Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

12 The heartbeat Electric rhythmic impulse move the heart. The contraction is called systole, the relaxation of the chambers is diastole. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

13 The cardiac conduction system
The heartbeat starts from the sinoatrial node (SA), the impulse-generating (pacemaker) tissue. The atrioventricular node (AV) causes the ventricle contraction. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

14 Blood vessels Arteries
Blood pressure in arteries and arterioles carries blood away from the heart. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

15 Blood vessels Veins Skeletal muscle contractions returns blood in veins and venules to the heart. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

16 Blood vessels Capillaries
Thin-walled capillaries permit exchange of materials and gas with the tissues. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

17 Pulmonary and systemic circuits
Cardiovascular systems includes two circuits. Pulmonary circuit: pulmonary arteries take O2-poor blood to lungs while pulmonary veins return O2-rich blood to the heart. Systemic circuit: left ventricles send O2-rich blood to aorta; vena cava takes O2-poor blood back to the right atrium. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

18 Pulmonary and systemic circuits
Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

19 Blood pressure Blood velocity blood depends on pressure and on capillaries area. Systolic pressure: is the pressure in arteries during ventricular systole. Diastolic pressure: is the pressure in arteries during ventricular diastole. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

20 Vascular diseases A stroke (or cerebral ictus) occurs when a small cranial arteriole bursts or is blocked by an embolus. A heart attack occurs when an coronary artery (the artery that bring O2-rich blood to capillaries of the heart) is completely blocked. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

21 Vascular diseases Healthy life style can help to prevent vascular diseases: refraining from smoking no drugs controlling weight healthy diet monitoring cholesterol exercising Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

22 Vascular diseases Cholesterol is an essential component of cell membranes and is carried by plasmic proteins (LDL and HDL). Anomalies in quantities of LDL or HDL can lead to the formation of cholesterol plaque in blood vessels. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

23 Blood functions Transports substances to and from capillaries where exchanges occur. Helps the organism defend against pathogens. Helps regulate body temperature. Forms clots to prevent hemorrhages. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

24 Blood composition Blood is composed of a liquid portion called plasma and formed elements: red and white blood cells, and platelets. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

25 Clotting Blood clotting involves platelets that release clotting factors at the site of the blood vessel damage. Fibrin threads provide a meshwork for a blood clot. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

26 Blood stem cells Hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs), are multipotent stem cells, found in the bone marrow of adults, that can produce all the blood cell types. HSCs can be easily transplanted from pelvic bone. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

27 Capillary exchange Between the arterial end and the venus end, substances diffuse according to the concentration gradient: CO2 and waste produced by the cells move in; C6H12O6, amino acids and O2 spread out. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

28 Capillary exchange Lymphatic capillaries collect excess tissue fluid (called lymph) and return it to the vascular system. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

29 AB0 classification system
RBC membranes carry specific carbohydrates and proteins that behave as antigens when transplanted in incompatible organisms. Those antigens are classified as A and B and determine the type of blood. RH factor is another important antigen in matching blood types. Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012

30 AB0 classification system
Agglutination: clumping of RBC in the presence of an antibody that binds multiple antigens and joins the cells. No agglutination Agglutination Sylvia S. Mader Concepts of Biology © Zanichelli editore, 2012


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