Circulatory System - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 23
About This Presentation
Title:

Circulatory System

Description:

Diffusion is insufficient and inefficient over distances larger than a few millimeters.... Circulatory system solves ... Diastole: relaxing phase of cycle ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:45
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 24
Provided by: e200702288
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Circulatory System


1
Circulatory System
  • Chapter 42

2
Diffusion alone is not enough
  • Diffusion is insufficient and inefficient over
    distances larger than a few millimeters.
  • Circulatory system solves problem by transporting
    materials in bulk throughout the body in
    dissolved or suspended form, so connects aqueous
    environment of body cells to the organs
  • where need absorption, gas exchange, waste
    removal

3
Where internal transport takes place
  • Gastrovascular cavity or circulatory system
  • G.C. orgs with few cell layers cnidarians,
    flatworms
  • C.S. orgs with many cell layers
  • nematodes through chordates
  • these rely on blood and blood pressure (so
    some type of heart is present)
  • Open circulatory systems hemolymph bathes the
    organs directly (uses cavities called sinuses)
  • Closed circulatory systems blood is confined to
    vessels and is separate from cell fluid

4
Figure 42.2 Open and closed circulatory systems
5
Circulatory system anatomy
  • Heart 2 atria that receive blood, 2 ventricles
    that pump it out
  • 3 types of blood vessels totaling 100,000 km in
    body
  • arteries carry blood away from heart
  • veins carry blood toward heart
  • capillaries microscopic vessels with thin,
    porous walls (chemical exhange occurs here)
  • Heart ? arteries ? arterioles ? capillaries ?
    venules ? veins ? heart

6
Figure 42.8 The structure of blood vessels
7
Circulatory schemes of vertebrates page 874 (2
chambers, 3 chambers, 4 chambers)
Double loop, some mixing
Double loop, completely separate
Single loop
8
  • Gill circulation from heart to gills
  • Systemic circulation from heart to rest of body
  • Pulmocutaneous circulation from heart to to
    capillaries in skin and lungs in amphibians
  • Pulmonary circulation from heart to lungs

9
Figure 42.0 External gills of a salmon
10
Figure 42.4 The mammalian cardiovascular system
an overview
Pumping cycle page 875
11
Heart contracts and relaxes in cycle
  • Cardiac cycle one complete sequence of pumping
    and filling
  • Systole contraction phase of cycle
  • Diastole relaxing phase of cycle
  • Cardiac output volume per min of blood that
    left ventricle pumps into the systemic circuit
    (depends on heart rate and stroke volume)
  • Stroke volume amount of blood pumped by left
    ventricle in each contraction

12
Figure 42.6 The cardiac cycle
13
Figure 42.5 The mammalian heart a closer look
14
Valves
  • AV valves between each atrium and ventricle
    anchored by chordae tendinae
  • Semilunar valves at two exits of heart, aorta
    (left ventricle) and pulmonary artery (right
    ventricle)
  • Valve defects blood flows differently, get
    different heart sounds
  • Ex. Murmur hissing of blood back through valve

15
Figure 42.7 The control of heart rhythm
16
Things that effect heart rate.
  • SA node, sets tempo but many physiological cues
    affect it
  • two sets of nerves affect heart rate
  • hormones (Ex. Epinephrine, adrenal glands,
    increases rate)
  • increase in body temp raises heart rate(1o
    C 10 beats/min)
  • exercise increases heart rate

17
Nodes
  • Sinoatrial node (SA node) pacemaker of heart
    located in wall of right atrium near where
    superior vena cava enters heart
  • Atrioventricular node (AV node) located in wall
    between right atrium and right ventricle delays
    impulses from SA node slightly, ensures that
    atria empty before ventricles contract

18
Movement of Blood through system
  • Law of continuity If a pipes diameter changes
    over its length, a fluid will flow through
    narrower segments faster than it flows through
    wider segments.
  • If this is the case, why does blood slow as it
    reaches the capillaries and the capillary beds?

19
Blood pressure
  • Hydrostatic pressure drives fluids through the
    cardiovascular system specifically, blood
    against vessels, so blood pressure
  • Systolic pressure heart contracts, blood is
    pumped
  • Diastolic pressure when elastic walls of
    arteries snap back during heart resting time
  • READ pages 878 to 880 AP lab will cover this.
  • Blood pressure is reported as Systolic over
    Diastolic

20
Two mechanisms regulate distribution of blood in
capillary beds
  • Interior Contraction of the smooth muscle layer
    in wall of arteriole cuts off flow when relax,
    blood flows
  • Exterior Precapillary sphincters control flow
    of blood between arterioles and venules

21
Figure 42.12 Blood flow in capillary beds
22
Read over pages 882-886
  • Blood and its structural components
  • Stem cells
  • Clotting
  • Cardiovascular disease

23
Lymphatic System
  • Returns fluid and blood proteins lost from
    circulatory system to the blood. Drains into the
    circulatory system near the junction of the venae
    cavae with the right atrium.
  • Lymph fluid in lymphatic system, pretty much
    like interstitial fluid.
  • Lymph vessels have valves, and depend on movement
    of skeletal muscles to squeeze fluid toward the
    heart.
  • Lymph nodes clusters of tissue that filter
    lymph and attack invaders. When body is fighting
    infection, the cells multiply and nodes swell.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com