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Monday, May 17, 2010

Circulation and Respiration

  • Circulatory system
  • Heart
  • Ventricle
  • Atrium
  • Arteries
  • Aorta
  • Subclavian
  • Cardiac
  • Carotid
  • Renal
  • Remoral
  • Pulmonary
  • Veins
  • Subclavian
  • Vena cava
  • Iliac
  • Capillaries
  • Throughfare channels
  • Blood
  • Plasma
  • Erythrocytes
  • Leucocytes
  • Platelets
  • Clotting
  • Thromboplastin
  • Thrombin
  • Fibrinogen
  • Fibrin
  • Lymph
  • Respiratory system
  • Lungs
  • Vital lung capacity
  • Diaphragm
  • Pharynx
  • Trachea
  • Bronchi
  • Bronchioles
  • Alveoli
  • External respiration
  • Internal respiration
  • Heart attack
  • Stroke

Circulation and Respiration

click to find the answer to today's questionWhat is the largest blood vessel in the body?


click for a career
Cardiovascular
Technologist
You know that muscles don't make a noise when they contract.
Listen to the sound of a heart beatinglink to an Internet Website
What causes the sound of a heartbeat? link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
What causes the sound known as a heart "murmur"? link to an Internet Website
Parts of the circulatory system: link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
flow of blood through the heart Heart link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
  • Each ventricle pumps about 35cm3 of blood with each contraction.
  • At rest, the heart pumps about 5 quarts of blood a minute.
  • During extreme exertion it can pump 40 quarts a minute.
  • Your heart beats about 3 million times in one year.
  • The beat of the heart can be graphed using an electrocardiogram, EKG.link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website 

    Look at the heart diagram above to answer these questions:
    • Where does blood go when it leaves the right side of the heart?
    • Where does blood go when it leaves the left side of the heart?
 Arteries link to a local picture
  • Thick walled vessels with blood under high pressure.
  • Arteries carry blood away from the heart.
    Important arteries:
    • Aorta - from the left ventricle of heart to the body.
    • Subclavian artery - from aorta to right arm.
    • Cardiac artery - from aorta to the heart.
    • Common carotid arteries - one branches from the aorta, another branches from the subclavian artery. These branches go up each side of the neck to the head.
    • Renal artery - from aorta to the kidneys.
    • Femoral arteries - inside of thigh supplying blood to the legs.
    • Pulmonary artery - the left and right pulmonary arteries carry blood from the right heart ventricle to the lungs.
 Veins link to a local picture
  • Thin walled vessels with blood under low pressure.
  • Have valves to keep blood from flowing backward.
  • Veins carry blood toward the heart.
    Important veins:
    • Subclavian veins - return blood from the arms to the heart.
    • Superior vena cava - up the left side of the body to return blood to the right atrium of the heart.
    • Iliac veins - return blood from the legs to the vena cava.
 Capillaries link to an Internet Websitecapillaries connect arteries and veins
  • Capillaries are so small that cells must move through them in single filelink to a local picture The capillary walls are only one cell thick, making it possible for the exchange of materials between the blood and body cells.
  • While the diagram on this page suggests that all blood must move through small capillaries to get from arteries to veins, this is not actually true. Larger blood vessels, known as throughfare channelslink to a local picture allow blood to bypass a capillary bed.
  • Every pound of body fat adds almost 200 miles of capillaries.
  • The average adult has a system of blood vessels over 80,000 miles long.
 Blood link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Websitered cells, white cells, and platelets
  • Your body contains about 5 liters of blood composed of the following:
  • Plasma:  (chem lab 146)
    • The straw-colored liquid part of blood.
      • 90% water
      • 10% dissolved salts, sugars, fats, & proteins
    • Vertebrate blood salt content is about 9g/L (0.9%). Eighty percent of this blood salt is NaCl.
    • Plasma makes up about 55% of the blood volume.
  • Erythrocytes: (red in picture)
    • RBCs, red blood cells, carry the respiratory gases O2 and CO2.
    • There are about 2.5 X 1013 RBCs in the body.
      • Males average about 5.4 million erythrocytes per cubic millimeter of blood.
      • Females average about 4.8 million erythrocytes per cubic millimeter of blood.
    • Your bone marrow produces about 1 Billion red blood cells every day.
      The red bone marrow of essentially all bones produces RBCs from birth to about five years of age. Between the ages of 5 to 20, the long bones slowly lose their ability to produce RBCs. Above age 20, most RBCs are produced primarily in the marrow of the vertebrae, the sternum, the ribs, and the pelvis.
    • The life span of a red blood cell is about 120 days.
  • Leukocytes: (blue in picture)
    • WBCs, white blood cells, fight infection.
    • Five basic types of WBCs are produced in the red bone marrow. link to an Internet Website
  • Platelets: involved in the clotting of blood.
    • Also produced by the red bone marrow, platelets are not really cells. link to an Internet Website

    • Blood clotting is a two-part process:
      1.
      • Platelets are destroyed by tissue fluids at a wound site releasing thromboplastin.
      • Thromboplastin reacts with calcium and prothrombin (produced by the liver) in the blood plasma to produce thrombin.
      2.
      • Thrombin reacts with fibrinogen, a soluble protein found in the blood, to produce fibrin.
      • The tiny threads of fibrin overlap to form a "web" which traps blood cells. As more and more of the blood cells are trapped, the break in the blood vessel is eventually plugged. (fibrin fibers are yellow in the picture above.)
 Blood Pressure & Pulse (Vital Signs): link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
Blood pressure consists of two measurements: the systolic pressure and the diastolic pressure. If the two measurements were 110 and 70, the blood pressure would be described as "one-ten over seventy".
  • Systolic pressure, the first and highest number, is the force the heart places on the walls of the blood vessels as it pumps with each heartbeat.
  • Diastolic pressure, the second and lowest number, is the pressure on the walls of the blood vessels when the heart relaxes between beats.
Both of these measurements are important. A high systolic pressure indicates strain on the blood vessels when the heart is attempting to pump blood. If the diastolic pressure is high, it means the blood vessels have little chance to relax between heartbeats.
Occasional high blood pressure is common. Anxiety, exercise, or nervousness can cause a high reading. Sustained high blood pressure can increase the risk of premature strokes and heart attacks. A pressure of 140/90 or higher is considered unhealthy.

Subsystems of the circulatory system: Systemic circulation
    Blood moves between the heart and the bulk of the body.
 Pulmonary circulation
    Blood moves between the heart and the lungs.
 Coronary circulation
    Blood moves through the vessels that supply the heart muscle.
 Hepatic portal circulation
    Blood moves from the digestive tract to the liver.
Blood easily transmits disease from one person to another
Do NOT come into contact with the blood of another person.The danger of disease transmission is much too great.

See pictures from inside a cardiac operating room. link to an Internet Website
The lymphatic system: link to an Internet Website
    About three liters of fluid, lymph, leak from blood vessels into body tissues each day. A system of low-pressure vessels, the lymphatic system, collects this fluid and returns it to the circulatory system.
Parts of the respiratory system: link to an Internet WebsiteTrachea, Bronchi, and Lungsthe key points to useful information on this page
 Lungs
  • Each lung weighs about 600 grams.
  • The surface area of your lungs is about 1,000 square feet, 20 times more than the surface area of your skin.
  • Total lung capacity of an adult is between 5 and 6 liters.
  • A normal breath exchanges about 1/2 liter of gas.
  • Vital lung capacity is the maximum amount of air that can be exhaled at one time.
 Diaphragm
  • A large sheet of muscle at the bottom of the rib cage.
  • When you inhale, this muscle drops and the rib cage raises.
    • This motion increases the volume of the lung cavity causing a low pressure area.
    • External air pressure forces air into the lungs.
  • How you breathe link to an Internet Website
 Pharynx
  • A muscular organ at the back of the throat.
  • The respiratory and digestive systems branch here.
  • The epiglottis is located in the pharynx.
 Trachea
  • Also called the windpipe.
  • A non-muscular tube leading from the pharynx to the lungs.
  • There are rings of cartilage spaced along this tube to keep it open.
 Bronchi
  • The two branches of the trachea leading to the lungs.
 Bronchioles
  • The smallest branches of the bronchial tubes.
 Alveoli
  • The air sacs at the end of each bronchioles.

External respirationlink to an Internet Website- exchange of gases between atmosphere and blood.Internal respiration - exchange of gases between blood and body cells.

The respiratory system is involved when we have a cold link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Websiteor the flu. link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
While the two are similar, link to an Internet Websiteit is quite easy to tell which one you have caught.


Day 1-2 Assignment - Circulation and Respiration (Test Your Concept Understanding) The stethoscope was invented in 1816 by a shy doctor.
  1. The cells in blood are mainly produced in the marrow of which bones?
  2. Describe hemoglobin and its function in blood.
  3. Who invented the stethoscope, and why?link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
  4. What is a megakaryocyte and where is one found?
  5. Answer the following questions about the lymphatic systemlink to an Internet Website
    1. How does circulation in the lymphatic system differ from circulation in the circulatory system?
    2. Three quarters of the lymph in the body empties into one vein. Which one?
    3. The heart is not responsible for moving lymph through the lymph vessels. What muscles are responsible for this motion?
    4. What happens in the lymph nodes?
    5. What role does the lymphatic system play in fighting infection?
    6. Besides the vessels and nodes, list three body organs that are part of the lymphatic system.
    7. Define the term "T-cells".
    8. How are the two types of acquired immunity, natural immunity and artificial immunity, different?
  6. Use one paragraph to describe the difference
    between a heart attack link to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Websiteand a strokelink to an Internet Websitelink to an Internet Website
30 Second CPR Guide
Research Links Links:

Biology Class








   

The aorta is the largest blood vessel in the body.




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