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Transport in humans Circulatory system Syllabus • understand why simple, unicellular organisms can rely on diffusion for movement of substances in and out of the cell • understand the need for a transport system in multicellular organisms Humans • recall the composition of the blood: red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets and plasma • understand the role of plasma in the transport of carbon dioxide, digested food, urea, hormones and heat energy • describe the adaptations of red blood cells for the transport of oxygen, including shape, structure and the presence of haemoglobin • describe how the immune system responds to disease using white blood cells, illustrated by phagocytes ingesting pathogens and lymphocytes releasing antibodies specific to the pathogen Syllabus • describe the structure of the heart and how it functions • understand that the heart rate changes during exercise and under the influence of adrenaline • describe the structure of arteries, veins and capillaries and understand their roles • recall the general plan of the circulation system to include the blood vessels to and from the heart, the lungs, the liver and the kidneys. Heart • Made up of cardiac muscle • Structure – 2 pumps – 4 chambers • 2 atria • 2 ventricles – Heart labeled according to how it sits in the body. Heart • Function – Pump blood around the body – Supplies cells with oxygen & nutrients, removes carbon dioxide and other waste products • Double circulatory system – Blood travels through the heart twice – Advantages • Blood pressure maintained • Oxygenated blood kept separate from deoxygenated blood • Enables lower pressure in pulmonary circulation • Other facts on the heart Vena cava Tricuspid (left AV) Aorta Right atrium Left atrium Bicuspid/mitral (right AV) Left ventricle Aortic semilunar Pulmonary Semilunar Right ventricle Pulmonary vein To the lungs Pulmonary artery To the body Arteries, veins & capillaries • Arteries – Structure • Thick walls (blood pressure high) • Narrow central tube (lumen) • Thick muscular layer (avoid over stretching when blood is pumped out) – Function • Carry blood away from the heart Arteries, veins & capillaries • Veins – Structure • • • • Thin walls (blood pressure low) Valves present to prevent backflow Wide central tube Bigger than arteries – Function • Carry blood to heart • Valves prevent blood flowing backwards • Muscles contracting help move blood through veins Arteries, veins & capillaries • Capillaries – Structure • Thin walls (one cell thick) • Large surface area • Walls ‘leak’ – Function • Slows down the blood so materials can be exchanged • Reduces blood pressure • Allows plasma to pass through the walls Blood • An adult weighing 70 kg has 5-6 litres of blood • Functions of blood – Transport various substances • • • • • Oxygen Carbon dioxide Hormones Glucose, amino acid Urea – Distribution of heat – Defence against disease – Message-transfer using hormones Blood • Structure – Plasma • Makes up 55% of blood • 90% is water • Pale yellow in colour – 45% consists of cells • Red Blood cells (RBC) – Carry oxygen • White blood cells (WBC) – Help against infections • Platelets – Used for clotting Plasma • 90% water • 10% includes: – Dissolved food from digestion • Glucose • Amino acids – Salts • Help keep the blood at the right concentration and the cells working properly • Na+, Cl-, Ca2+ – Proteins • Help the blood clot and help to protect the body against invaders – Hormones • Control the way the body responds – Waste materials • Carbon dioxide • urea Red Blood Cells • • • • Biconcave in shape Made in the bone marrow No nucleus Contain the protein haemoglobin which carries oxygen • Live for 120 days • Travel once around circulatory system every 75 seconds • Shortage of haemoglobin = anaemia – Symptoms = tiredness White blood cells • Two types identified by the shape of their nucleus. – Phagocytes – Lymphocytes • Protect the body against diseases • Can be destroyed by cancer = leukaemia and by HIV. White blood cells • Phagocytes – Made in bone marrow – Contain a nucleus that has several lobes – Used to defend us against disease by killing germs which enter the body – Kill by engulfing (‘eating’) germs – Dead phagocytes often contain dead bacteria = ‘pus’ – Dispose of old red blood cells White blood cells • Lymphocytes –Produce chemicals called antibodies to destroy germs and react with poisons to make them harmless. –Nucleus is large and circular in shape –Mature in lymph tissue Platelets • Made in the bone marrow • Fragments of cells • No nucleus • Used for blood clotting Clotting • Stops: – pathogens entering through cuts – Person from losing too much blood. • Procedure – Platelets bump into the rough edges of a cut – A chemical is then released, the damaged tissues also release chemicals. – Blood plasma contains a soluble protein (fibrinogen) that is changed into fibrin (insoluble), when the chemicals (from the platelets & damaged tissues) are released. Clotting • Procedure – Fibrin forms fibres which form a mesh across the wound. – RBC and platelets get trapped in these fibres = BLOOD CLOT – When blood clot is exposed to air = scab – Animation of clotting process Exercise • Cells need to respire to produce the energy needed by the body to perform various metabolic processes – Oxygen and glucose are needed for this. – Muscles cells have many mitochondria so that they can have enough energy • More exercise = more cellular respiration = more CO2 = blood must be pumped more to rid body of waste and to deliver more O2 & glucose. • Therefore heart and breathing rate increases. • If sudden the exercise can cause stress for the heart – It is not able to pump enough blood How healthy is your heart? Measuring your heart rate can be used to monitor fitness. The fitter you are, the sooner your pulse rate returns to normal after exercise. Adrenaline • ‘Fight or flight’ hormone • Is released in times of stress • Increases heart rate and the amount of blood pushed out of the heart, when the ventricles contract, (stroke volume) How lifestyle affects the heart Heart problems are made worse by an unhealthy lifestyle. • Smoking causes high blood pressure. • Eating too much makes you overweight so your heart has to work harder to supply your body. • Stress makes your blood pressure higher. Preventative measures • exercise • healthy diet • Reduce stress Heart problems • Coronary heart disease – Occurs when the coronary arteries (arteries that supply the heart muscles with blood) become blocked = heart stops beating = heart attack. • Angina – Symptom of coronary heart disease – occurs when your heart muscle does not get enough blood. – may feel like pressure or a squeezing pain in your chest. • Diabetes (mellitus) – is a condition in which the amount of glucose (sugar) in the blood is too high because the body cannot use it properly. Reference • • • • • http://library.thinkquest.org/C0115080/?c=circ_sys http://www.emints.org/ethemes/resources/S00001019.shtml http://learn.genetics.utah.edu/units/basics/blood/types.cfm http://owensboro.kctcs.edu/gcaplan/anat2/notes/Notes7%20Nonspepecific%20Defenses.htm http://www.surgeryencyclopedia.com/A-Ce/Bone-Marrow-Transplantation.html • http://www.medicinenet.com/heart_attack/article.htm • http://www.nhlbi.nih.gov/health/dci/Diseases/Angina/Angina_WhatIs.html • • • http://www.diabetes.org.uk/Guide-to-diabetes/What_is_diabetes/What_is_diabetes/, cited 8th Oct 2006 http://www.tiscali.co.uk/reference/encyclopaedia/hutchinson/m0029864.html http://www.niaid.nih.gov/publications/immune/the_immune_system.pdf#search=%22immune%20system%22 • http://www.biology.arizona.edu/IMMUNOLOGY/tutorials/antibody/str ucture.html • http://www.eicsd.k12.ny.us/staffweb/jDipzins/Curriculum/7th%20Grade/Diseases/Immune%20System.jpg • Jones, M (1994) Biology for IGCSE, Heinemann, Oxford. • Jones, M & Jones, G (2002) Biology, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge. • http://library.thinkquest.org/C0115080/images/bl oodgroupss.gif