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The Circulatory System
The circulatory system includes the Heart, Blood Tissue and the Blood Vessels.
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The Circulatory System-Transport
The absorption and circulation of materials throughout an organism
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Functions of the Circulatory System:
1) Transport of needed substances to body cells. (oxygen, amino acids, glucose, fatty acids, glycerol, salts, etc.) to all body cells. 2) Carries carbon dioxide and other waste products away from cells. * In general, the blood is a fluid tissue helping to maintain homeostasis for all cells in the body.
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The heart functions as a double pump beating in unison.
1) Deoxygenated blood--relatively low in oxygen 2) Oxygenated blood--relatively high in oxygen ** Heartbeat is stimulated by aN electrochemical impulse. Pacemaker - in the right atrium - initiates the heartbeat
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The Human (Mammalian) Heart Structure
1. septum: muscular central wall dividing the mammalian heart into two halves 2. atria: thin walled upper heart chambers which receive blood pump blood to the ventricles 3. Ventricles: muscular thick walled chambers which pump blood from the heart -- the lower chambers 4. Valves - prevent the backward flow of blood in the heart
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1. Inferior & superior vena cava
Flow of blood (deoxygenated) 1. Inferior & superior vena cava 2. Right atrium 3. valve 4. Right ventricle 5. valve 6. Pulmonary arteries (BLOOD TO THE LUNGS –GAS EXCHANGE) …(oxygenated) 7. Pulmonary veins 8. Left Atrium 9. valve 10. Left ventricle 11. valve 12. Aorta
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Blood Vessels Arteries * carry blood away from the heart
* all except the pulmonary artery carry oxygenated blood * thick walled and elastic Pulse: expansion and contraction of the artery walls in response to the heartbeat
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Veins * carry blood toward the heart * contain valves * closer to the body surface than the arteries * all except the pulmonary vein carry deoxygenated blood * thinner, less muscular and elastic than arteries * depend upon muscle and diaphragm movements for blood flow
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Capillaries * most numerous of blood vessels * connect arteries to veins * microscopic, one cell thick walls * site of much exchange between the blood and the intracellular fluid (lymph) by diffusion
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Which Way Did it Go?
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Blood Blood = a connective tissue made up of blood cells and a liquid called blood plasma. About 7 % of your body mass About Liters in an adult human Men = 5.6 Liters Women = 4.5 Liters Pregnant woman = 5.0 Liters
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The Functions of Blood Delivers: Picks Up: Nutrients - waste kidneys
Oxygen, Water, minerals carbon dioxide lungs Hormones and enzymes heat skin pollutants
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The Parts of Blood Plasma =carries everything
2. Red Blood Cells =(RBC) gas exchange 3. White blood Cells =(WBC) fight infection 4. Platelets = clotting
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Blood Composition Plasma 55% (liquid part of the blood); Blood Cells 45%
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55% plasma 45 % RBC, WBC and platelets
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Plasma- nonliving Yellow liquid (92% H2O)
8 % nutrients, salts, urea, hormones Carries: RBC, WBC, Platelets, Carbon dioxide, food and waste
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Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes)
most numerous disc shaped smaller than white blood cells, larger than platelets produced in the red marrow of long bones destroyed in the liver and spleen contain the iron protein compound HEMOGLOBIN whose chief function is to combine with oxygen and carry it to the cells
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--largest blood cells--several different types
White Blood cells (Lymphocytes or Leukocytes) --largest blood cells--several different types --about 8,000 per drop of blood --most are formed in the bone marrow or in the lymph tissue --most protect the body against diseases by forming antibodies or engulfing bacteria
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Platelets --smallest blood cells (fragments) --150,000 to 300,000 per drop of blood --needed for clotting
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Clotting: Involves a series of enzyme controlled reactions resulting in the formation of protein fibers that trap blood cells and form a clot.
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Pacemaker- Uses electrical impulses from wire leads inserted into the Heart. Keeps the Heart in perfect rhythm.
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