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Blood Vessels Circulatory System.

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Presentation on theme: "Blood Vessels Circulatory System."— Presentation transcript:

1 Blood Vessels Circulatory System

2 Blood vessels are organs that carry the blood throughout your body.

3 Blood Vessels Did you know that your blood circulates through about 90,000 kilometres of blood vessels in your body? A kilometre is 1,000 meters or miles!

4 There are three types of blood vessels: arteries, capillaries, and veins.

5 Arteries Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart. With the exception of the pulmonary artery, they carry oxygen rich blood.

6 Arteries Each time the heart contracts (squeezes), blood is pumped out at high pressure. Arteries are thick, strong, and made of three layers of tissue that help them withstand that pressure.

7 Artery Arteries = Away

8 Veins Veins are blood vessels that carry blood towards the heart.
With the exception of the pulmonary veins, they carry oxygen poor blood. Veins are aided in pushing blood back toward the heart by the skeletal muscles, as they contract and squeeze nearby veins.

9 Veins Like arteries, veins have three tissue layers. But veins have thinner walls because they do not receive blood directly from the heart. The largest veins have one way valves to prevent backflow and keep blood flowing toward the heart.

10 VEINS have VALVES and VENTURE back!

11 The importance of valves …
Varicose Veins

12 Capillaries Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels where the exchange of materials with cells (through the process of diffusion) takes place. They form a net­like structure throughout your tissues.

13 Capillaries Capillary walls are only one cell thick and may be so narrow that blood cells must pass through in single file. Oxygen and other materials diffuse through capillary walls into the tissues and then into cells.

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15 The Flow of Blood Each heart beat pushes about 90 millilitres of oxygenated blood from the heart into the aorta, the body's largest artery. From there, the blood flows to smaller arteries and then capillaries. Eventually, it transfers its oxygen to body cells and returns back to the heart through the veins.

16 Blood Pressure Contractions of the heart generate blood pressure.
Blood pressure keeps the blood flowing in the right direction. Valves in the veins prevent the back­flow of blood.

17 Blood Pressure Blood pressure is a measure of the force of blood pushing against the walls of the arteries. It is measured in millimetres of mercury (mm Hg). Normal adult blood pressure is around 120/80 mm Hg.

18 The rhythmic change in blood pressure is called a pulse.
Heartbeat The rhythmic change in blood pressure is called a pulse.

19 Sphygmomanometer (sphyg· mom· a· nom· e· ter)
The tool used to measure blood pressure.

20 Sphygmomanometer The cuff is pumped up with air to restrict blood flow in the arm. As the pressure in the cuff is released, blood starts flowing again. You can hear the flow of your blood in a stethoscope.

21 Helpful Videos Ted Ed: How Blood Vessels Work Types of Blood Vessels

22 Helpful Videos Crash Course: Blood Vessels, Part 1 Crash Course: Blood Vessels, Part 2


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