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Circulatory Systems

Circulatory Systems. Mammals have a closed system , with; a double pump 3 types of tubes a liquid moving one way. Functions of the Circulatory System. Transports oxygen and nutrients from where it enters blood to all body cells

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Circulatory Systems

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  1. Circulatory Systems Mammals have a closed system, with; a double pump 3 types of tubes a liquid movingone way

  2. Functions of the Circulatory System • Transports oxygen and nutrients from where it enters blood to all body cells • Transports carbon dioxide and other wastes from body to where they are removed • Transports hormones and antibodies around body • Prevents blood loss by clotting • Kills germs • Controls the amount of fluid in tissues • Helps control body temperature

  3. The Heart • A double pump to move blood through blood vessels • Left side stronger than right • Made from Cardiac Muscle • 4 chambers: 2 atriums ( auricles) above and 2 ventricles below • 4 valves, to stop backflow • Cardiac muscles contract due to electric impulses that pressurize the blood.

  4. Blood flow in summary Left ventricle – aortic valve - aorta – body – vena cava – right atrium (auricle) – tricuspid valve – right ventricle – mitral (bicuspid) valve - pulmonary artery – lungs – pulmonary vein – left atrium (auricle) – pulmonary valve - left ventricle … and so on…

  5. Heart beat (pulse rate) control • The heart beat and pulse rate is controlled by an electrical signal from the sinus node, located in the upper right atrium. • From the sinus node, the electrical signal spreads across the 2 atria, causing them to contract, and to push their load of blood into the ventricles. The signal then causes the 2 ventricles to contract and push the blood out of the heart towards the lungs and body tissue. • This signal controls the number and sequence of heart contractions and assures the heart works as efficiently as possible.

  6. Blood vessels 3 main types: • Arteries: carry blood away from the heart, thick walled, under high pressure (arterioles link to capillaries). • Veins: carry blood back to the heart, thinner walls than arteries, larger internal diameter, valves stop back flow (venules link to capillaries). • Capillaries: smallest vessels, fluid leaks out of capillary walls to bathe the surrounding tissue cells to exchange gases, nutrients, wastes and kill germs

  7. Blood

  8. Blood Components • Red Blood Cells (RBC) – full of haemoglobin (an iron based molecule) which carries oxygen, disc shaped cells with no nucleus so cannot self-repair, made in bone marrow. • White Blood Cells (WBC) – protects body against disease, cells with a nucleus, no haemoglobin, can move through capillary walls into tissues, made in bone marrow. • Plasma – 90% water, part of blood that RBC, WBC, platelets, nutrients and wastes travel in, carbon dioxide dissolves in as bicarbonate. • Platelets – involved in blood clotting, also made in bone marrow

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