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Circulation Read Chapter 31. 1. Blood Blood carries to the cells Oxygen produced by R______________ Nutrients processed by D_____________ Blood carries away waste materials from the cells Carbon dioxide taken to the L_______ Urea, taken to the K_________ Blood also transports
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Circulation Read Chapter 31 • 1. Blood • Blood carries to the cells • Oxygen produced by R______________ • Nutrients processed by D_____________ • Blood carries away waste materials from the cells • Carbon dioxide taken to the L_______ • Urea, taken to the K_________ • Blood also transports • Hormones (molecules that regulate the • function of tissue or organs) • Enzymes (molecules that catalysis reactions) • Antibodies (protein that are on B-cells and • attach to & kill foreign bodies)
What is blood made up of? • Plasma, mostly water. carries dissolved molecules & plasma proteins for clotting • Red blood cells transport O2 in hemoglobin, no nucleus, can’t repair them selves. Have a 120 day life-span • White blood cells, defend body against invaders
Blood clotting When plasma comes into contact with tissue it reacts to produce a protein (fibrin) which clump together to form a mesh which traps red blood cells & platelets to form a clot.
The Cardiovascular System This is the Heart & blood vessels The Blood vessels: Arteries Carries blood away from heart to the body. Thick , tough elastic walls to withstand high pressure Veins Carries blood to the heart from the body. Have larger passageways. Capillaries Very fine blood vessels where exchange of substances between the blood & cells occurs. Most molecules leave capillaries by diffusion or bulk flow. Fluids renter the capillaries by osmosis
Pulmonary vein Blood moves from _________ To _______________ Pulmonary artery Blood moves from _________ To _______________ Aorta Blood moves from _________ To _______________ Superior vena cava Blood moves from _________ To _______________ Inferior vena cava Blood moves from _________ To _______________
The Heart • The heart has evolved from the simple two chambered heart in fish to the three chambered heart in amphibians to our four chambered heart. • Disadvantages of the fish heart • Not enough power to make blood flow fast after the gills • Advantages of our heart • More efficient • Higher pressure • Higher metabolic rate & so higher levels of activity • Relatively constant body temperature
Structure of the Heart The interior of the Heart is divided into 4 chambers Right atrium Deoxygenated blood from the body enters here via the superior & inferior veins. Left atrium Oxygenated blood returning from the lungs enters here via the pulmonary vein. Right ventricle Propels deoxygenated blood through the pulmonary arteries to the capillaries of the lungs Left ventricle Propels oxygenated blood through the aorta to the capillaries in body tissue Valves Stop back flow of blood between the chambers & also back into the blood vessels during contraction
The atria are thin walled so they can expand to take in blood & both contract at the same time to push blood through the valves into the ventricles. The ventricles contract simultaneously, this closes the valves preventing back flow The healthy heart of an adult beats 70 times a minute at rest