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The Circulatory System. Function. Transport materials O 2 , CO 2 , waste, vitamins, nutrients, H 2 O Regulate body temperature Includes: Blood, arteries, veins, capillaries. Blood. Red Blood Cells Carry oxygen to all cells White Blood Cells Fight infections Plasma
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Function • Transport materials • O2, CO2, waste, vitamins, nutrients, H2O • Regulate body temperature • Includes: Blood, arteries, veins, capillaries
Blood • Red Blood Cells • Carry oxygen to all cells • White Blood Cells • Fight infections • Plasma • Liquid part of blood; mostly water • Platelets • Help to clot the blood
Red Blood Cells • Live 4 months • No nucleus • Small size • Make up approximately 40% of blood volume • Carry O2 to the cells of your body • Return to the lungs to excrete CO2
White Blood Cell • Largest of the three types of cells • Responsible for fighting infections or germs • Rather short lifecycle, living from a few days to a few weeks • One drop of blood can contain 7000 to 25000 white blood cells • If an invading infection fights back and persists, that number will significantly increase
Plasma • Is a sticky, pale yellow fluid mixture of water, protein and salts • Is 95% water • Makes up 55% of human blood • Helps maintain BP, carries blood cells, nutrients etc. • Can be collected from a normal healthy donor twice weekly
Platelets • assist in blood clotting • Smallest of blood cells • Make up 5% to 7% of blood volume • Form a mesh net to form clots in the Blood to help stop bleeding
Blood Facts • Blood makes up about 7% of your body's weight. • An average adult has about 14 to 18 pints of Blood. • One standard unit or pint of Blood equals about two cups. • Blood carries oxygen and nutrients to all of the body. • Blood carries carbon dioxide and other waste products back to the lungs, kidneys and liver for disposal. • Blood fights against infection and helps heal wounds. • One unit of donated whole Blood is separated into components before use (red Blood cells, white Blood cells, plasma, platelets) • There are four main Blood types: A, B, AB and O.
Blood Vessels • Arteries • Carry blood AWAY from the heart (usually oxygenated) • Walls are thicker to withstand the greater pressure • Veins • Carry blood TOWARD the heart (usually deoxygenated) • Walls are thinner because of lower pressure • One way valves • Capillaries • Tiny, thin-walled blood vessels that allow the exchange of gases, nutrients and waste • Some only fit one cell through at a time
Blood Vessels • Oxygenated (red) • All artieries except 2 • Pulmonary Arteries carry blood to the lungs • Deoxygenated (blue) • All veins except 2 • Pulmonary veins carry blood from the lungs to the heart
Arteries to Veins Arteries ArteriolesCapillariesVenule Vein Oxygenated blood Deoxygenated blood
Heart • Structure: • 2 atria • Receive blood from body and pump to ventricles • Thin walled • 2 ventricles • Pump blood to body tissues • Thick, muscular walls • Right side pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs to get oxygenated • Left side pumps oxygenated blood to the body
Left side Right side
Did you know? • The only artery in the body that pumps deoxygenated blood is the pulmonary artery. • The pulmonary artery pumps blood from the heart to the lungs to be oxygenated!
Video: Circulatory System 1 • Video: Blood Doping • Video: Blood Doping3 • Video: Blood Doping2