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Chapter 42 Circulation and Gas Exchange
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O2 and CO2 must dissolve in water before they can pass through a membrane so all respiratory membranes must be kept moist Diffusion is a slow process 1 sec over 1 um but 1000 seconds (over 16 minutes) over 1 mm
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Open circulatory system hemolymph sinuses-arthropods respiratory pigment hemocyanin is not contain in cells and is very diffuse in the hemolymph
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Reptilian heart has a partial septum in the ventricle
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Pulmonary Aortic Tricuspid Valve Bicuspid or Mitral Valve
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Bundle of His Purkinje fibers
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Diastole- atria contract and ventricles relax and fill with blood, blood washes back in the arteries and closes the semilunar valves and produces the lower diastolic pressure Systole- ventricles contract forcing blood into arteries and a pulse and higher pressure called systolic pressure and slapping the atrioventricular valves shut Heart murmur- a defect in a valve that allows backflow mitral valve prolapse
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Slide # 32 Comparison of vein and artery
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Muscular constriction of arterioles and precapillary sphincters controls the flow of blood through capillaries Figure 23.11 1 Sphincters relaxed Capillaries Arteriole Venule Precapillary sphincters 2 Sphincters contracted Arteriole Venule Thoroughfare channel Thoroughfare channel
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High hydrostatic pressure due to blood pressure in the smaller diameter capillaries on the arteriole end; low osmotic pressure pulling water in because the blood still has all its water Lower hydrostatic pressure due larger dia. vessels and less blood volume; higher osmotic pulling water in lower conc. of water vs. dissolved substances
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Arteriole end of a capillary
Venous end of a capillary
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Slide # 31
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to cells that have tissue factor
->thromboplastin
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Slide # 29 Blood clot Crenated red blood cell
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4-6 liters of whole blood in average adult; 45% is cellular elements
Ischemia-insufficient blood flow to portion of the heart that can result in angina pectoralis and death of a section of heart tissue Stroke-death of nervous tissue in the brain due to blockage of arteries Thrombus-stationary clot; embolus-moving clot Pulmonary embolism-most common place Atherosclerosis-fatty plaques attach to the artery walls Arteriosclerosis-plaques become hardened by calcium Aneurism-an enlarged weakened area of an artery Stenosis-the partial blockage of an artery
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Normal stenosis with Plaque
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Lymph is returned to the circulatory system through the subclavian veins using pressure changes in the thoracic cavity to pull the lymph into the blood stream.
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edema-swelling caused by excess fluid loss from the capillaries can be caused by hypertension or capillary damage pulmonary embolism-most common place for an embolism to lodge
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O2 does not dissolve in water very well
Water has lower concentrations of O2 and it is also more dense; thus fish must use more energy in respiration but they do not have a problem with their respiratory membranes remaining moist so they can have more surface area.
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Counter-current exchange
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membranes around the lungs and lining the thoracic cavity are the
pleural membranes; an infection is called pleurisy an infection of the larynx is called laryngitis
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Slide 182 Nasal Septum Capillaries under the mucosa layer
Mucus membranes moisten and warm the air
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Slide # 185 Trachea
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Slide # 186 Trachea epithelial lining
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Slide # 189 Lung Bronchiole
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Slide #191 Lung Alveoli
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Slide # 193 Alveolar Macrophages
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Lung Interalveolar Septum
Slide # 194 Lung Interalveolar Septum Interalveolar septum Type II cell secretes surfactant Note thickness of cells between the air and the blood vessel Air spaces inside alveoli
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The vagus nerve is a cranial nerve that has fibers connecting to both the diaphragm and the sinoatrial node to either slow or speed up both breathing and heart rate
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CO2 Transport 7% in solution in blood plasma
23% binds to amino groups of hemoglobin 70% transported in the blood in the form of bicarbonate ions and H+
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Diving mammals can stay submerged so long because they: have a higher blood volume have more hemoglobin and more erythrocytes/ml. of blood have more myoglobin in their muscle tissues only circulate blood to essential tissues during dives
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