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Chapter 21

Chapter 21. The circulatory system III Blood vessels Arteries Capillaries Veins. Blood vessels. Defined: hollow tubes of smooth muscle, elastic and dense connective tissue. S erve as conduits through which blood is circulated to every cell in the body.

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Chapter 21

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  1. Chapter 21 The circulatory system III Blood vessels Arteries Capillaries Veins

  2. Blood vessels Defined: hollow tubes of smooth muscle, elastic and dense connective tissue. • Serve as conduits through which blood is circulated to every cell in the body. • Tunica interna(intima)– -inner most layer of vessel wall. Lined with endothelial cells overlying a sparse layer of loose CT. • Tunica media – -middle layer and thickest in arteries. Contains smooth muscle, collagen and in larger vessels ( e.g.-aorta) elastin fibers. • Tunica externa(adventitia) -outer most layer covering vessels, consisting of loose CT. It merges with neighboring blood vessels, nerves and/or other organs. It contains the vasa vasorum which supply blood to outer ½ of vessel wall in larger vessels. • Lumen: central canal or opening in the center of the vessel.

  3. Neurovascular bundle

  4. Conducting (elastic) arteries

  5. Muscular arteries

  6. Classes of Blood Vessels • Arteries –-are the resistance vessels of the CV system. Designed to withstand large fluctuations in blood pressure. Conducting (elastic or large) arteries:1.0–2.5 cm diam. • Biggest arteries; Aorta, carotids, pulmonary trunk, common iliacs and subclavians are all examples. • Contain a thin elastic layer between intima → media and the media → externa. • Have up to 70 layers of elastic tissue. Distributing (muscular) arteries: 0.3 mm to1 cm diam. smaller branches that distribute blood to specific organs - have up to 40 layers of elastic tissue

  7. Resistance (small arteries) and arterioles • Small arteries are too variable in number and location to be given specific individual names. 10 -300 μ diam. • Contain up to 25 layers of smooth muscle and little elastic tissue. • Arterioles are the smallest of arteries and have only 3 layers of smooth muscle and little tunica externa. • Metarterioles – terminal aretrioles before capillary bed; merge into through fare channels from which true capillaries branch off. • Precapillary sphincters are at merge point and regulate blood flow based on tissue needs

  8. Tissue blood flow: Terminal arterioles → metarterioles which → through fare channels. Precap. Sphincters- Regulate flow direction into true capillariesor through channels.

  9. Capillaries • For blood to serve any purpose, materials (eg. O2, CO2, nutrients, wastes and hormones) must pass through the walls of blood vessels. • There are only 2 sites in the vascular system for this to occur: Capillaries and Venules. • Capillaries are composed of only an endothelium and a thin basement membrane. • They average ~ 5 μ to 9μ in size. • Capillaries far out number venules in the cardiovascular system.

  10. Capillaries Molecules pass into/out of capillary walls by 4 routes: • 1. Direct diffusion through the endothelial cell membrane - down the concentration gradient O2 and CO2 • 2. Through intercellular clefts - small molecules • 3. Pinocytotic vesicles and caveolae (in pocketing of vessel wall) - large molecules and proteins • 4. Through fenestrations (pores) in the capillary wall • CO2 and O2 easily diffuse through the endothelial cells

  11. Capillaries a) Continuous b) Fenestrated c) Sinusoidal

  12. Venules • Venules and veins contain valves to maintain a one way flow of blood back to the heart. • Venules are the smallest of veins (~15-20 μm). • Possess a tunica interna with a few fibroblasts wrapped around them and tend to be more porous than capillaries. • Most leukocytes migrate from blood stream through postcapillaryvenules.

  13. Venous valves -muscles pump blood by contracting and compressing veins.

  14. Veins • Are sometimes called capacitance vessels • At rest veins contain 54% of the blood volume • Medium veins range up to 10 mm in diameter (ex. ulnar, great saphenous, radial). • Medium veins have a tunica interna, an endothelium, a basement membrane and loose CT with a thin interna elastic lamina

  15. Large veins • Diameters greater than 10 mm. • Contain longitudinal bundles of smooth muscle and a thick tunica externa. • Ex: vena cava, pulmonary veins, internal jugular and renal veins

  16. Pulmonary Circulation • Blood flows through the lungs to get rid of CO2 and pick up O2. • Begins in right ventricle → pulmonary trunk → pulmonary arteries → lobar arteries → arterioles → lung capillary beds → venules → pulmonary veins → left atrium

  17. Pulmonary Circulation Pulmonary trunk → pulmonary arteries → lobar arteries

  18. Systemic Circulation • Blood flow to the entire body except for the pulmonary circuit • Begins in left atrium → left ventricle → aorta → every cell in the entire body → arteries → arterioles → capillary beds → venules → veins → vena cava → right atrium → pulmonary circulation

  19. Major arteries off of aortic arch

  20. Major arteries off of aorta

  21. Specialized circulations • Bronchial circulation goes to lung tissues proper to provide nutritive blood to the lungs since the pulmonary circuit does not provide blood to the lung tissues • Circle of Willis provides blood flow to the brain. It arrives there via two separate pathways. • Hepatic Portal circulation provides blood flow to the liver via a portal pathway. • A portal circulation passes through two capillary beds in series whereas most circulations pass through a single capillary bed.

  22. Blood flow to the head and brain

  23. Circle of Willis • Provides blood flow to the brain by either the internal carotid artery or the basilar artery. • The internal carotid enters the cranial cavity through the carotid foramen. • The basilar artery is formed by the convergence of the two vertebral arteries that come up through the transverse foramen of the cervical vertebra.

  24. Circle of Willis

  25. Hepatic Portal Circulation • The hepatic portal circulation is unique in that blood passes from the intestines into a primary capillary bed outside of the liver and then into the hepatic portal vein into a second capillary bed in the liver before it passes out of the liver via the hepatic vein into the inferior vena cava.

  26. Hepatic Portal Circulation

  27. Hepatic portal veins

  28. Fetal Circulation • The fetal circulation provides blood to the fetus from the mother via the umbilical vessels. • Keep in mind that the fetal lungs are nonfunctional until after the child is born. • Fetal circulation is provided by an interatrial shunt the foramen ovale and a pulmonary → aorta shunt the ductus arteriosis. • Blood from the placenta comes to the fetus via the umbilical vein → right atrium → foramen ovale→ LA → LV → body or → RV → pulmonary trunk → ductus arteriosis → aorta. • Theses become the fossa ovale and ligamentum arterosis after birth of the child.

  29. Umbilical vein →RA → LA →LV → aorta → body →umbilical artery → placenta. Umbilical vein →RA → RV →Pulmonary trunk → ductus areteriosis → aorta → body → umbilical artery → placenta.

  30. Arteries to know • Aorta: ascending, aortic arch, thoracic and abdominal • Coronary arteries: left ant. descending and circumflex • Brachiocephalic • Left and right Common Carotid • Internal and external Carotid arteries • Left and right Subclavian • Axillary, Brachial, Radial, Ulnar • Vertebral, Intercostal, Celiac trunk, Superior and Inferior mesenteric, Common iliac, External iliac, Suprarenal, Renal, Gonadal, Femoral, Popliteal, Ant. and Post. Tibial, Fibular

  31. Major arteries Aorta Brachiocephalic Rt/Lt common carotids Int/ext carotids Left subclavian

  32. Arteries of the upper limb Axillary Brachial Ulnar Radial

  33. Abdominal blood flow - mesenteric arteries

  34. Arteries in the abdominal cavity Suprarenal Renal Lumbar Common iliacs

  35. Arteries to lower limb Femoral Popliteal Ant/post tibial

  36. Veins to know • Superior and inferior vena cava • Brachiocephalic, Subclavian, Cephalic • Internal and external jugular • Axillary, Brachial, Basilic, Median cubital • Hepatic, Suprarenal, Renal, Gonadal, Lumbar, Common iliac, External iliac, Internal iliac, Femoral • Great saphenous, Popliteal, Ant and Post Tibial, Peroneal • Superior sagittal and Transverse sinuses, Cavernous sinus

  37. Major veins Superior vena cava Inferior vena cava Ext jugular vein Int jugular vein

  38. Venous return from the head

  39. Venous return from the upper limb Axillary Med. cubital Brachial Basilic

  40. Venous return from abdomen Hepatic Suprerenal Renal Int/Ext iliac Gonadal Lumbar

  41. Hepatic portal circulation

  42. Venous return from the lower limb Femoral vein Gt saphenous Popliteal Ant/post tibial

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