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Overview of the Cardiovascular System • Cardiovascular system – Heart and blood vessels • Circulatory system – Heart, blood vessels, and the blood 19-1 The Pulmonary and Systemic Circuits Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or CO2display.O 2 • Left side of heart Pulmonary circuit O2-poor, CO2-rich blood O2-rich, CO2-poor blood Systemic circuit CO2 O2 Figure 19.1 – Fully oxygenated blood arrives from lungs via pulmonary veins – Blood sent to all organs of the body via aorta • Right side of heart – Oxygen-poor blood arrives from inferior and superior venae cavae – Blood sent to lungs via pulmonary trunk 19-2 Position, Size, and Shape of the Heart • Heart located in mediastinum, between lungs • Base—wide, superior portion of heart, large vessels attach here • Apex—tapered inferior end, tilts to the left • In adult: weighs 10 ounces, 3.5 in. wide at base, 5 in. from base to apex • At any age, heart is size of fist Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Aorta Pulmonary trunk Superior vena cava Right lung Base of heart Parietal pleura (cut) Pericardial sac (cut) Apex of heart Diaphragm (c) Figure 19.2c 19-3 The Pericardium • Pericardium—double-walled sac that encloses the heart – Allows heart to beat without friction, provides room to expand, yet resists excessive expansion – Anchored to diaphragm inferiorly and sternum anteriorly • Parietal pericardium—pericardial sac – Superficial fibrous layer of connective tissue – Deep, thin serous layer • Visceral pericardium (epicardium) – Serous membrane covering heart • Pericardial cavity—space inside the pericardial sac filled with 5 to 30 mL of pericardial fluid • Pericarditis—painful inflammation of the membranes 19-4 The Pericardium Figure 19.3 19-5 The Heart Wall • Heart wall has three layers: epicardium, myocardium and endocardium • Epicardium (visceral pericardium) – Serous membrane covering heart – Adipose in thick layer in some places – Coronary blood vessels travel through this layer • Endocardium – Smooth inner lining of heart and blood vessels – Covers the valve surfaces and is continuous with endothelium of blood vessels 19-6 The Heart Wall • Myocardium – Layer of cardiac muscle proportional to work load • Muscle spirals around heart which produces wringing motion – Fibrous skeleton of the heart: framework of collagenous and elastic fibers • Provides structural support and attachment for cardiac muscle and anchor for valve tissue • Electrical insulation between atria and ventricles; important in timing and coordination of contractile activity 19-7 The Chambers • Four chambers Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. – Right and left atria • Two superior chambers • Receive blood returning to heart • Auricles (seen on surface) enlarge chamber Aorta Right pulmonary artery Left pulmonary artery Superior vena cava Pulmonary trunk Right pulmonary veins Left pulmonary veins Pulmonary valve Interatrial septum Right atrium Left atrium Aortic valve Left AV (bicuspid) valve Left ventricle Fossa ovalis Pectinate muscles Right AV (tricuspid) valve Papillary muscle Interventricular septum Tendinous cords Endocardium Trabeculae carneae Right ventricle Inferior vena cava Myocardium Epicardium – Right and left ventricles • Two inferior chambers • Pump blood into arteries Figure 19.7 19-8 The Chambers Figure 19.7 19-9 The Valves • Valves ensure one-way flow of blood through heart • Atrioventricular (AV) valves—control blood flow between atria and ventricles – Right AV valve has three cusps (tricuspid valve) – Left AV valve has two cusps (mitral valve, formerly ‘bicuspid’) – Chordae tendineae: cords connect AV valves to papillary muscles on floor of ventricles • Prevent AV valves from flipping or bulging into atria when ventricles contract • Each papillary muscle has 2-3 attachments to heart floor (like Eiffel Tower) to distribute physical stress, coordinate timing of electrical conduction, and provide redundancy 19-10 The Valves • Semilunar valves—control flow into great arteries; open and close because of blood flow and pressure – Pulmonary semilunar valve: in opening between right ventricle and pulmonary trunk – Aortic semilunar valve: in opening between left ventricle and aorta 19-11 The Valves Figure 19.8a 19-12 Aortic Valve Figure 19.8b 19-13 Blood Flow Through the Chambers • Ventricles relax – Pressure drops inside the ventricles – Semilunar valves close as blood attempts to back up into the ventricles from the vessels – AV valves open – Blood flows from atria to ventricles 19-14 Blood Flow Through the Chambers • Ventricles contract – AV valves close as blood attempts to back up into the atria – Pressure rises inside of the ventricles – Semilunar valves open and blood flows into great vessels 19-15 Blood Flow Through the Chambers Figure 19.9 • Blood pathway travels from the right atrium through the pulmonary circuit, then systemic circuit (through the body) and back to the starting point 19-16 The Coronary Circulation • 5% of blood pumped by heart is pumped to the heart itself through the coronary circulation to sustain its strenuous workload – 250 mL of blood per minute – Needs abundant O2 and nutrients 19-17 Arterial Supply • Myocardial infarction (MI)—heart attack – Interruption of blood supply to the heart from a blood clot or fatty deposit (atheroma) can cause death of cardiac cells within minutes – Some protection from MI is provided by arterial anastomoses which provide alternative routes of blood flow (collateral circulation) within the myocardium 19-18 Arterial Supply • Flow through coronary arteries is greatest when heart relaxes – Contraction of the myocardium compresses the coronary arteries and obstructs blood flow – Opening of the aortic valve flap during ventricular systole covers the openings to the coronary arteries blocking blood flow into them – During ventricular diastole, blood in the aorta surges back toward the heart and into the openings of the coronary arteries 19-19 Angina and Heart Attack • Angina pectoris—chest pain from partial obstruction of coronary blood flow – Pain caused by ischemia of cardiac muscle – Obstruction partially blocks blood flow – Myocardium shifts to anaerobic fermentation, producing lactic acid and thus stimulating pain 19-20 Angina and Heart Attack • Myocardial infarction (MI)—sudden death of a patch of myocardium resulting from long-term obstruction of coronary circulation – Atheroma (blood clot or fatty deposit) often obstructs coronary arteries – Cardiac muscle downstream of the blockage dies – Heavy pressure or squeezing pain radiating into the left arm – Some painless heart attacks may disrupt electrical conduction pathways, leading to fibrillation and cardiac arrest • Silent heart attacks occur in diabetics and the elderly – MI responsible for about 27% of all deaths in the U.S. 19-21 Structure of Cardiac Muscle Striated myofibril Glycogen Nucleus Mitochondria Intercalated discs (b) Intercellular space Desmosomes Gap junctions Figure 19.11a–c (c) (a): © Ed Reschke 19-22 The Conduction System • Coordinates the heartbeat – Composed of an internal pacemaker and nerve-like conduction pathways through myocardium • Generates and conducts rhythmic electrical signals in the following order: – Sinoatrial (SA) node: modified cardiocytes • Pacemaker initiates each heartbeat and determines heart rate • Pacemaker in right atrium near base of superior vena cava – Signals spread throughout atria 19-23 The Conduction System (Continued) – Atrioventricular (AV) node • Located near the right AV valve at lower end of interatrial septum • Electrical gateway to the ventricles • Fibrous skeleton—insulator prevents currents from getting to ventricles by any other route – Atrioventricular (AV) bundle (bundle of His) • Bundle forks into right and left bundle branches • Branches pass through interventricular septum toward apex – Purkinje fibers • Nerve-like processes spread throughout ventricular myocardium • Cardiocytes then pass signal from cell to cell through gap junctions 19-24 The Conduction System Figure 19.12 19-25 Nerve Supply to the Heart • Sympathetic nerves increase heart rate and contraction strength – Sympathetic pathway to heart originates in the lower cervical to upper thoracic segments of the spinal cord – Continues to adjacent sympathetic chain ganglia and some ascend to cervical ganglia – Postganglionic fibers pass through cardiac plexus in mediastinum and continue as cardiac nerves to the heart – Fibers terminate in SA and AV nodes, in atrial and ventricular myocardium (also aorta, pulmonary trunk, and coronary arteries) 19-26 Nerve Supply to the Heart • Parasympathetic nerves slow heart rate – Pathway begins with nuclei of the vagus nerves in the medulla oblongata – Extend to cardiac plexus and continue to the heart by way of the cardiac nerves – Fibers of right vagus nerve lead to the SA node – Fibers of left vagus nerve lead to the AV node – Little or no vagal stimulation of the myocardium 19-27 Electrical and Contractile Activity of the Heart • Cycle of events in heart – Systole: contraction – Diastole: relaxation • Although “systole” and “diastole” can refer to contraction and relaxation of either type of chamber, they usually refer to the action of the ventricles 19-28 The Cardiac Rhythm • Sinus rhythm—normal heartbeat triggered by the SA node – Adult at rest is typically 70 to 80 bpm (vagal tone) • Ectopic focus—a region of spontaneous firing other than the SA node – May govern heart rhythm if SA node is damaged – Nodal rhythm—if SA node is damaged, heart rate is set by AV node, 40 to 50 bpm • Other ectopic focal rhythms are 20 to 40 bpm and too slow to sustain life 19-29 Pacemaker Physiology • SA node does not have a stable resting membrane potential – Starts at −60 mV and drifts upward due to slow Na+ inflow • Gradual depolarization is called pacemaker potential – When it reaches threshold of −40 mV, voltage-gated fast Ca2+ and Na+ channels open • Faster depolarization occurs peaking at 0 mV – K+ channels then open and K+ leaves the cell • Causing repolarization • Once K+ channels close, pacemaker potential starts over • When SA node fires it sets off heartbeat – As the internal pacemaker, it typically fires every 0.8 seconds, setting the resting rate at 75 bpm 19-30 Pacemaker Physiology Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Membrane potential (mV) +10 0 –10 Fast K+ outflow Fast Ca2+–Na+ inflow –20 –30 Action potential Threshold –40 Pacemaker potential –50 –60 Slow Na+ inflow –70 0 .4 .8 1.2 1.6 Time (sec) Figure 19.13 19-31 Impulse Conduction to the Myocardium • Signal from SA node stimulates two atria to contract almost simultaneously – Reaches AV node in 50 ms • Signal slows down through AV node – Thin cardiocytes with fewer gap junctions – Delays signal 100 ms which allows the ventricles time to fill 19-32 Impulse Conduction to the Myocardium • Signals travel very quickly through AV bundle and Purkinje fibers – Entire ventricular myocardium depolarizes and contracts in near unison • Signals reach papillary muscles slightly later than rest of myocardium • Ventricular systole progresses up from the apex of the heart – Spiral arrangement of myocardium twists ventricles slightly; like someone wringing out a towel 19-33 Electrical Behavior of the Myocardium • Cardiocytes have a stable resting potential of −90 mV, and depolarize only when stimulated • Three phases to cardiocyte action potential: depolarization, plateau, repolarization – Depolarization phase (very brief) • Stimulus opens voltage-regulated Na+ gates (Na+ rushes in), membrane depolarizes rapidly • Action potential peaks at +30 mV • Na+ gates close quickly – Plateau phase lasts 200 to 250 ms, sustains contraction for expulsion of blood from heart • Voltage-gated slow Ca2+ channels open admitting Ca2+ which triggers opening of Ca2+ channels on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) • Ca2+ (mostly from the SR) binds to troponin triggering contraction 19-34 Electrical Behavior of the Myocardium • Cardiocyte action potential (Continued) – Repolarization phase: Ca2+ channels close, K+ channels open, rapid diffusion of K+ out of cell returns it to resting potential – Has a long absolute refractory period of 250 ms (compared to 1 to 2 ms in skeletal muscle) • Prevents wave summation and tetanus which would stop the pumping action of the heart 19-35 Electrical Behavior of the Myocardium 1. Na+ gates open Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3 Plateau 3. Na+ gates close 4 0 Membrane potential (mV) 2. Rapid depolarization +20 4. Slow Ca2+ channels open 2 Na+ inflow depolarizes the membrane and triggers the opening of still more Na+ channels, creating a positive feedback cycle and a rapidly rising membrane voltage. 3 Na+ channels close when the cell depolarizes, and the voltage peaks at nearly +30 mV. 4 Ca2+ entering through slow Ca2+ channels prolongs depolarization of membrane, creating a plateau. Plateau falls slightly because of some K+ leakage, but most K+ channels remain closed until end of plateau. 5 Ca2+ channels close and Ca2+ is transported out of cell. K+ channels open, and rapid K+ outflow returns membrane to its resting potential. Myocardial relaxation 2 Myocardial contraction –60 –80 Voltage-gated Na+ channels open. 5 Action potential –20 –40 1 Absolute refractory period 1 0 .15 Time (sec) .30 Figure 19.14 5. Ca2+ channels close, K+ channels open (repolarization) 19-36 The Electrocardiogram Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 0.8 second R R Millivolts +1 PQ ST segment segment T wave P wave 0 PR Q interval S QT interval QRS interval • Electrocardiogram (ECG or EKG) – Composite of all action potentials of nodal and myocardial cells detected, amplified and recorded by electrodes on arms, legs, and chest –1 Atria contract Ventricles contract Atria contract Ventricles contract Figure 19.15 19-37 The Electrocardiogram • P wave – SA node fires, atria depolarize and contract – Atrial systole begins 100 ms after SA signal • QRS complex – Ventricular depolarization – Complex shape of spike due to different thickness and shape of the two ventricles • ST segment—ventricular systole – Corresponds to plateau in myocardial action potential • T wave – Ventricular repolarization and relaxation 19-38 The Electrocardiogram 1. 2. Atrial depolarization begins Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Key Atrial depolarization complete (atria contracted) Wave of depolarization Wave of repolarization R P P Q S 4 Ventricular depolarization complete. 1 Atria begin depolarizing. 3. 4. 5. 6. Ventricles begin to depolarize at apex; atria repolarize (atria relaxed) Ventricular depolarization complete (ventricles contracted) Ventricles begin to repolarize at apex Ventricular repolarization complete (ventricles relaxed) R T P P Q S 2 Atrial depolarization complete. 5 Ventricular repolarization begins at apex and progresses superiorly. R R T P P Q 3 Ventricular depolarization begins at apex and progresses superiorly as atria repolarize. Q S 6 Ventricular repolarization complete; heart is ready for the next cycle. Figure 19.16 19-39 Blood Flow, Heart Sounds, and the Cardiac Cycle • Cardiac cycle—one complete contraction and relaxation of all four chambers of the heart • Questions to consider: How does pressure affect blood flow? How are heart sounds produced? 19-40 Phases of the Cardiac Cycle • Ventricular filling (during diastole) • Isovolumetric contraction (during systole) • Ventricular ejection (during systole) • Isovolumetric relaxation (during diastole) • The entire cardiac cycle (all four of these phases) are completed in less than 1 second 19-41 Phases of the Cardiac Cycle • In a resting person – Atrial systole lasts about 0.1 second – Ventricular systole lasts about 0.3 second – Quiescent period, when all four chambers are in diastole, lasts about 0.4 second • Total duration of the cardiac cycle is therefore 0.8 second in a heart beating 75 bpm 19-42 Overview of Volume Changes • Normally, right and left sides of heart eject the same volume of blood even though they are under different pressure • Congestive heart failure (CHF)—results from the failure of either ventricle to eject blood effectively – Usually due to a heart weakened by myocardial infarction, chronic hypertension, valvular insufficiency, or congenital defects in heart structure 19-43 Overview of Volume Changes • Left ventricular failure—blood backs up into the lungs causing pulmonary edema – Shortness of breath or sense of suffocation • Right ventricular failure—blood backs up in the vena cava causing systemic or generalized edema – Enlargement of the liver, ascites (pooling of fluid in abdominal cavity), distension of jugular veins, swelling of the fingers, ankles, and feet • Eventually leads to total heart failure 19-44 Overview of Volume Changes Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 1 Right ventricular output exceeds left Ventricular output. 2 Pressure backs up. 3 Fluid accumulates in pulmonary tissue. 1 2 3 • If the left ventricle pumps less blood than the right, the blood pressure backs up into the lungs and causes pulmonary edema (a) Pulmonary edema Figure 19.21a 19-45 Overview of Volume Changes Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 1 Left ventricular output exceeds right ventricular output. 2 Pressure backs up. 3 Fluid accumulates in systemic tissue. • If the right ventricle pumps less blood than the left, pressure backs up in the systemic circulation and causes systemic edema 1 2 (b) Systemic edema 3 Figure 19.21b 19-46 Heart Rate • Pulse—surge of pressure produced by heart beat that can be felt by palpating a superficial artery – – – – Infants have HR of 120 bpm or more Young adult females average 72 to 80 bpm Young adult males average 64 to 72 bpm Heart rate rises again in the elderly 19-47 Heart Rate • Tachycardia—resting adult heart rate above 100 bpm – Stress, anxiety, drugs, heart disease, or fever – Loss of blood or damage to myocardium • Bradycardia—resting adult heart rate of less than 60 bpm – In sleep, low body temperature, and endurancetrained athletes • Positive chronotropic agents—factors that raise the heart rate • Negative chronotropic agents—factors that lower the heart rate 19-48 Coronary Artery Disease • Coronary artery disease (CAD)—a constriction of the coronary arteries – Usually the result of atherosclerosis: an accumulation of lipid deposits that degrade the arterial wall and obstruct the lumen – Begins when endothelium damaged by hypertension, diabetes, or other causes 19-49 Coronary Artery Disease (Continued) – Monocytes penetrate walls of damaged vessels and transform into macrophages • Absorb cholesterol and fats to be called foam cells – Can grow into atherosclerotic plaques (atheromas) – Platelets adhere to damaged areas and secrete plateletderived growth factor • Attracting immune cells and promoting mitosis of muscle and fibroblasts, and the deposition of collagen • Bulging mass grows to obstruct arterial lumen 19-50 Coronary Artery Disease • Causes angina pectoris, intermittent chest pain, by obstructing 75% or more of the blood flow • Immune cells of atheroma stimulate inflammation – May rupture, resulting in traveling clots or fatty emboli • Cause coronary artery spasms due to lack of secretion of nitric oxide (vasodilator) • Inflammation transforms atheroma into a hardened complicated plaque – One cause of arteriosclerosis 19-51 Coronary Artery Disease • Major risk factor for CAD is excess of lowdensity lipoprotein (LDL) in the blood combined with defective LDL receptors in arterial walls – LDLs—protein-coated droplets of cholesterol, neutral fats, free fatty acids, and phospholipids – Dysfunctional receptors in arterial cells cause them to accumulate excess cholesterol 19-52 Coronary Artery Disease • Unavoidable risk factors: heredity, aging, being male • Preventable risk factors: obesity, smoking, lack of exercise, anxious personality, stress, aggression, and diet • Treatment – Coronary bypass surgery • Uses great saphenous vein from leg or small thoracic arteries – Balloon or laser angioplasty – Insertion of a stent to prevent restenosis 19-53 Blood Pressure • Blood pressure (BP)—the force that blood exerts against a vessel wall • Measured at brachial artery of arm using sphygmomanometer – A close approximation of pressure at exit of left ventricle • Two pressures are recorded – Systolic pressure: peak arterial BP taken during ventricular contraction (ventricular systole) – Diastolic pressure: minimum arterial BP taken during ventricular relaxation (diastole) between heart beats • Normal value, young adult: 120/75 mm Hg 20-54 Blood Pressure • Hypertension—high blood pressure – Chronic resting BP > 140/90 – Consequences • Can weaken arteries, cause aneurysms, promote atherosclerosis • Hypotension—chronic low resting BP – Caused by blood loss, dehydration, anemia 20-55 Capillary Exchange • The most important blood in the body is in the capillaries • Only through capillary walls are exchanges made between the blood and surrounding tissues • Capillary exchange—two-way movement of fluid across capillary walls – Water, oxygen, glucose, amino acids, lipids, minerals, antibodies, hormones, wastes, carbon dioxide, ammonia 20-56 The Major Systemic Arteries Figure 20.21 • Arteries supply oxygen and nutrients to all organs 20-57 The Aorta and Its Major Branches • Ascending aorta – Right and left coronary arteries supply heart • Aortic arch – Brachiocephalic • Right common carotid supplying right side of head • Right subclavian supplying right shoulder and upper limb – Left common carotid supplying left side of head – Left subclavian supplying shoulder and upper limb • Descending aorta: differently named in chest and abdomen – Thoracic aorta above diaphragm – Abdominal aorta below diaphragm 20-58 The Major Systemic Veins Figure 20.22 • Deep veins run parallel to arteries while superficial veins have many anastomoses 20-59 Arterial Pressure Points Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Superficial temporal a. Facial a. Common carotid a. Anterior superior iliac spine Inguinal ligament Pubic tubercle Femoral n. Femoral a. Radial a. Brachial a. Adductor longus m. Femoral v. Sartorius m. Gracilis m. Rectus femoris m. Femoral a. Great saphenous v. Vastus lateralis m. (b) Inguinal ligament Popliteal a. Sartorius Adductor longus Posterior tibial a. Dorsal pedal a. (c) Figure 20.41a–c (a) • Some major arteries close to surface allow for palpation of pulse and serve as pressure points to reduce arterial bleeding 20-60 Hypertension—The “Silent Killer” • Hypertension—most common cardiovascular disease affecting about 30% of Americans over 50 • “The silent killer” – Major cause of heart failure, stroke, and kidney failure • Damages heart by increasing afterload – Myocardium enlarges until overstretched and inefficient • Renal arterioles thicken in response to stress – Drop in renal BP leads to salt retention (aldosterone) and worsens the overall hypertension 20-61 Hypertension—The “Silent Killer” • Primary hypertension – Obesity, sedentary behavior, diet, nicotine – 90% of cases • Secondary hypertension—secondary to other disease – Kidney disease, atherosclerosis, hyperthyroidism, Cushing syndrome – 10% of cases 20-62 Components and General Properties of Blood • Hematology: Study of blood • A liquid connective tissue consisting of cells and extracellular matrix – Plasma: matrix of blood • Clear, light yellow fluid – Formed elements: blood cells and cell fragments • Red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets 18-63 Components and General Properties of Blood • Seven kinds of formed elements – 1)Erythrocytes: red blood cells (RBCs) – 2)Platelets • Cell fragments from special cell in bone marrow – Leukocytes: white blood cells (WBCs) • Five leukocyte types divided into two categories • Granulocytes (with granules) – 3)Neutrophils – 4)Eosinophils – 5)Basophils • Agranulocytes (without granules) – 6)Lymphocytes – 7)Monocytes 18-64 Components and General Properties of Blood Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Monocyte Small lymphocyte Neutrophil Platelets Eosinophil Small lymphocyte Erythrocyte Young (band) neutrophil Neutrophil Monocyte Large lymphocyte Neutrophil Basophil Figure 18.1 18-65 Components and General Properties of Blood Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Withdraw blood Centrifuge Plasma (55% of whole blood) Buffy coat: leukocytes and platelets (<1% of whole blood) Erythrocytes (45% of whole blood) Figure 18.2 Formed elements • Hematocrit—centrifuge blood to separate components – Erythrocytes are heaviest and settle first • 37% to 52% total volume – White blood cells and platelets • 1% total volume • Buffy coat – Plasma • The remainder of volume • 47% to 63% • Complex mixture of water, proteins, nutrients, electrolytes, nitrogenous wastes, hormones, and gases 18-66 Blood Plasma • Plasma—liquid portion of blood – Serum: remaining fluid when blood clots and solids are removed • Identical to plasma except for the absence of fibrinogen • Three major categories of plasma proteins – Albumins: smallest and most abundant • Contribute to viscosity and osmolarity; influence blood pressure, flow, and fluid balance – Globulins (antibodies) • Provide immune system functions • Alpha, beta, and gamma globulins – Fibrinogen • Precursor of fibrin threads that help form blood clots • Plasma proteins are formed by liver – Except globulins (produced by plasma cells) 18-67 Blood Plasma • Nitrogenous compounds – Free amino acids from dietary protein or tissue breakdown – Nitrogenous wastes (urea) • Toxic end products of catabolism • Normally removed by the kidneys • Nutrients – Glucose, vitamins, fats, cholesterol, phospholipids, and minerals • Dissolved O2, CO2, and nitrogen • Electrolytes – Na+ makes up 90% of plasma cations 18-68 Blood Viscosity and Osmolarity • Viscosity—resistance of a fluid to flow, resulting from the cohesion of its particles – Whole blood 4.5 to 5.5 times as viscous as water – Plasma is 2.0 times as viscous as water • Important in circulatory function 18-69 Blood Viscosity and Osmolarity • Osmolarity of blood—the total molarity of those dissolved particles that cannot pass through the blood vessel wall – If too high, blood absorbs too much water, increasing the blood pressure – If too low, too much water stays in tissue, blood pressure drops, and edema occurs – Optimum osmolarity is achieved by the body’s regulation of sodium ions, proteins, and red blood cells 18-70 Starvation and Plasma Protein Deficiency • Hypoproteinemia – Deficiency of plasma proteins • Extreme starvation • Liver or kidney disease • Severe burns • Kwashiorkor – Children with severe protein deficiency • Fed on cereals once weaned – Thin arms and legs – Swollen abdomen 18-71 How Blood is Produced • Adult production of 400 billion platelets, 100-200 billion RBCs, and 10 billion WBCs every day • Hemopoiesis—production of blood, especially its formed elements • Hemopoietic tissues produce blood cells – Yolk sac produces stem cells for first blood cells • Colonize fetal bone marrow, liver, spleen, and thymus – Liver stops producing blood cells at birth – Spleen remains involved with lymphocyte production 18-72 How Blood is Produced – Red bone marrow produces all seven formed elements • Pluripotent stem cells (PPSC) – Formerly called hemocytoblasts or hemopoietic stem cells • Colony-forming unit—specialized stem cells only producing one class of formed element of blood • Myeloid hemopoiesis—blood formation in the bone marrow • Lymphoid hemopoiesis—blood formation in the lymphatic organs (beyond infancy this only involves lymphocytes) 18-73 Erythrocytes Figure 18.4c • Two principal functions – Carry oxygen from lungs to cell tissues – Pick up CO2 from tissues and bring to lungs • Insufficient RBCs can cause death in minutes due to lack of oxygen to tissues 18-74 Form and Function • Disc-shaped cell with thick rim Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Surface view – 7.5 m diameter and 2.0 m thick at rim – Lose nearly all organelles during development • Lack mitochondria – Anaerobic fermentation to produce ATP • Lack of nucleus and DNA – No protein synthesis or mitosis 7.5 µm 2.0 µm (a) Sectional view Figure 18.4a 18-75 Form and Function – Blood type determined by surface glycoproteins and glycolipids – Cytoskeletal proteins (spectrin and actin) give membrane durability and resilience • Stretch and bend as squeezed through small capillaries 18-76 Form and Function • Gas transport—major function – Increased surface area/volume ratio • Due to loss of organelles during maturation • Increases diffusion rate of substances – 33% of cytoplasm is hemoglobin (Hb) • 280 million hemoglobin molecules on one RBC • O2 delivery to tissue and CO2 transport to lungs • Carbonic anhydrase (CAH) in cytoplasm – Produces carbonic acid from CO2 and water – Important role in gas transport and pH balance 18-77 Hemoglobin • Each Hb molecule consists of: – Four protein chains—globins • Adult HB has two alpha and two beta chains • Fetal Hb contains two alpha and two gamma chains • Globins bind CO2 (5% of CO2 in blood) – Four heme groups • Heme groups – Nonprotein moiety that binds O2 to ferrous ion (Fe) at its center Figure 18.5a,b 18-78 Quantities of Erythrocytes and Hemoglobin • RBC count and hemoglobin concentration indicate amount of O2 blood can carry – Hematocrit (packed cell volume): percentage of whole blood volume composed of RBCs • Men 42% to 52% cells; women 37% to 48% cells – Hemoglobin concentration of whole blood • Men 13 to 18 g/dL; women 12 to 16 g/dL – RBC count • Men 4.6 to 6.2 million/L; women 4.2 to 5.4 million/L 18-79 Quantities of Erythrocytes and Hemoglobin • Values are lower in women – Androgens stimulate RBC production – Women have periodic menstrual losses – Hematocrit is inversely proportional to percentage of body fat 18-80 Erythrocyte Production Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Pluripotent stem cell Colony-forming unit (CFU) Erythrocyte CFU Precursor cells Erythroblast Mature cell Reticulocyte Erythrocyte Figure 18.6 • • • • Erythroopoiesis—RBC production 1 million RBCs are produced per second Average lifespan of about 120 days Development takes 3 to 5 days – Reduction in cell size, increase in cell number, synthesis of hemoglobin, and loss of nucleus 18-81 Erythrocyte Production Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Pluripotent stem cell Colony-forming unit (CFU) Erythrocyte CFU Precursor cells Erythroblast Mature cell Reticulocyte Erythrocyte Figure 18.6 • First committed cell—erythrocyte colony-forming unit – Has receptors for erythropoietin (EPO) from kidneys • Erythroblasts (normoblast) multiply and synthesize hemoglobin • Nucleus discarded to form a reticulocyte – Named for fine network of endoplasmic reticulum – 0.5% to 1.5% of circulating RBCs are reticulocytes 18-82 Iron Metabolism Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. leaves 8 Remaining transferrin is distributed to other organs where Fe2+ is used to make hemoglobin, myoglobin, etc. 7 Fe2+ binds to apoferritin to be stored as ferritin 1 Mixture of Fe2+ and Fe3+ is ingested Fe3+ Ferritin 2 Stomach acid converts Fe3+ to Fe2+ Fe2+ Apoferritin Gastroferritin 6 In liver, some transferrin releases Fe2+ for storage Blood plasma 5 In blood plasma, Fe2+ binds to transferrin Transferrin 3 Fe2+ binds to gastroferritin 4 Gastroferritin transports Fe2+ to small intestine and releases it for absorption Figure 18.7 18-83 Iron Metabolism • Iron—key nutritional requirement – Lost daily through urine, feces, and bleeding • Men 0.9 mg/day and women 1.7 mg/day – Low absorption rate of iron requires consumption of 5 to 20 mg/day 18-84 Iron Metabolism • Dietary iron: ferric (Fe3+) and ferrous (Fe2+) – Stomach acid converts Fe3+ to absorbable Fe2+ – Gastroferritin binds Fe2+ and transports it to small intestine – Absorbed into blood and binds to transferrin for transport to bone marrow, liver, and other tissues - Bone marrow for hemoglobin, muscle for myoglobin, and all cells use for cytochromes in mitochondria • Liver apoferritin binds to create ferritin for storage 18-85 Iron Metabolism • Vitamin B12 and folic acid – Rapid cell division and DNA synthesis that occurs in erythropoiesis • Vitamin C and copper – Cofactors for enzymes synthesizing hemoglobin • Copper is transported in the blood by an alpha globulin called ceruloplasmin 18-86 Erythrocyte Homeostasis • Negative feedback control – Drop in RBC count causes hypoxemia detected by kidney – Kidney production of erythropoietin stimulates bone marrow – RBC count increases in 3 to 4 days • Stimuli for increasing erythropoiesis – – – – Low levels O2 (hypoxemia) High altitude Increase in exercise Loss of lung tissue in emphysema Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Hypoxemia (inadequate O2 transport) Increased O2 transport Sensed by liver and kidneys leaves Increased RBC count Accelerated erythropoiesis Secretion of erythropoietin Stimulation of red bone marrow Figure 18.8 18-87 Erythrocyte Death and Disposal • RBCs rupture (hemolysis) in narrow channels of spleen and liver • Macrophages in spleen – Digest membrane bits – Separate heme from globin • Globins hydrolyzed into amino acids • Iron removed from heme – Heme pigment converted to biliverdin (green) – Biliverdin converted to bilirubin (yellow) – Released into blood plasma (kidneys—yellow urine) – Liver removes bilirubin and secretes into bile - Concentrated in gallbladder: released into small intestine; bacteria create urobilinogen (brown feces) 18-88 Erythrocyte Death and Disposal Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Amino acids Iron Folic acid Vitamin B12 Erythropoiesis in red bone marrow Nutrient absorption Erythrocytes circulate for 120 days Small intestine Expired erythrocytes break up in liver and spleen Cell fragments phagocytized Hemoglobin degraded Figure 18.9 Globin Heme Biliverdin Bilirubin Bile Feces Iron Storage Reuse Hydrolyzed to free amino acids Loss by menstruation, injury, etc. 18-89 Anemia • Causes of anemia fall into three categories – Inadequate erythropoiesis or hemoglobin synthesis • Kidney failure and insufficient erythropoietin • Iron-deficiency anemia • Pernicious anemia—autoimmune attack of stomach tissue leads to inadequate vitamin B12 absorption • Hypoplastic anemia—slowing of erythropoiesis • Aplastic anemia—complete cessation of erythropoiesis – Hemorrhagic anemias from bleeding – Hemolytic anemias from RBC destruction 18-90 Anemia • Anemia has three potential consequences – Tissue hypoxia and necrosis • Patient is lethargic • Shortness of breath upon exertion • Life-threatening necrosis of brain, heart, or kidney – Blood osmolarity is reduced, producing tissue edema – Blood viscosity is low • Heart races and pressure drops • Cardiac failure may ensue 18-91 Sickle-Cell Disease • Hereditary defects that occur mostly among people of African descent • Caused by recessive allele that modifies structure of Hb (makes HbS) – Differs only on the sixth amino acid of the beta chain – HbS does not bind oxygen well – RBCs become rigid, sticky, pointed at ends – Clump together and block small blood vessels – Can lead to kidney or heart failure, stroke, joint pain, or paralysis – Heterozygotes (only one sickle cell allele) are resistant to malaria Figure 18.10 18-92 Blood Types • Blood types and transfusion compatibility are a matter of interactions between plasma proteins and erythrocytes • Karl Landsteiner discovered blood types A, B, and O in 1900 – He won a Nobel Prize in 1930 • Blood types are based on interactions between antigens and antibodies 18-93 Blood Types • Antigens – Complex molecules on surface of cell membrane that activate an immune response • • • • They are genetically unique to the individual Used to distinguish self from foreign matter Foreign antigens generate an immune response Agglutinogens—antigens on the surface of the RBC that are the basis for blood typing 18-94 Blood Types • Antibodies – Proteins (gamma globulins) secreted by plasma cells • • • • Part of immune response to foreign matter Bind to antigens and mark them for destruction Forms antigen–antibody complexes Agglutinins—antibodies in the plasma that bring about transfusion mismatch • Agglutination – Antibody molecule binding to antigens – Causes clumping of red blood cells 18-95 Blood Types • RBC antigens called agglutinogens – Called antigen A and B – Determined by glycolipids on RBC surface • Antibodies called agglutinins – Found in plasma – Anti-A and anti-B Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Type O Type B leaves Type A Type AB Key Galactose Fucose N-acetylgalactosamine Figure 18.12 18-96 The ABO Group • Your ABO blood type is determined by presence or absence of antigens (agglutinogens) on RBCs – – – – Blood type A person has A antigens Blood type B person has B antigens Blood type AB has both A and B antigens Blood type O person has neither antigen • Most common: type O • Rarest: type AB 18-97 ABO Blood Typing Figure 18.14 18-98 The ABO Group • Antibodies (agglutinins); anti-A and anti-B • Appear 2 to 8 months after birth; maximum concentration by 10 years of age – Antibody-A or antibody-B (or both or neither) are found in plasma • You do not form antibodies against your antigens 18-99 The ABO Group • Agglutination – Each antibody can attach to several foreign antigens on several different RBCs at the same time • Responsible for mismatched transfusion reaction – Agglutinated RBCs block small blood vessels, hemolyze, and release their hemoglobin over the next few hours or days – Hb blocks kidney tubules and causes acute renal failure 18-100 The ABO Group • Universal donor – Type O: most common blood type – Lacks RBC antigens – Donor’s plasma may have both antibodies against recipient’s RBCs (anti-A and anti-B) • May give packed cells (minimal plasma) • Universal recipient – Type AB: rarest blood type – Lacks plasma antibodies; no anti-A or anti-B 18-101 The Rh Group • Rh (C, D, E) agglutinogens discovered in rhesus monkey in 1940 – Rh D is the most reactive and a patient is considered blood type Rh+ if having D antigen (agglutinogens) on RBCs – Rh frequencies vary among ethnic groups 18-102 The Rh Group • Anti-D agglutinins not normally present – Form in Rh- individuals exposed to Rh+ blood • Rh- woman with an Rh+ fetus or transfusion of Rh+ blood • No problems with first transfusion or pregnancy • Hemolytic disease of the newborn (HDN) can occur if Rh- mother has formed antibodies and is pregnant with second Rh+ child – Anti-D antibodies can cross placenta • Prevention – RhoGAM given to pregnant Rh- women • Binds fetal agglutinogens in her blood so she will not form anti-D antibodies 18-103 Hemolytic Disease of the Newborn Figure 18.16 • Rh antibodies attack fetal blood causing severe anemia and toxic brain syndrome 18-104 Form and Function • Least abundant formed element » 5,000 to 10,000 WBCs/L • Protect against infectious microorganisms and other pathogens • Conspicuous nucleus • Spend only a few hours in the bloodstream before migrating to connective tissue • Retain their organelles for protein synthesis • Granules – All WBCs have lysosomes called nonspecific (azurophilic) granules – Granulocytes (some WBCs) have specific granules that contain enzymes and other chemicals employed in defense against pathogens 18-105 Types of Leukocytes • Granulocytes – Neutrophils (60% to 70%): polymorphonuclear leukocytes • Barely visible granules in cytoplasm; three- to five-lobed nucleus – Eosinophils (2% to 4%) • Large rosy-orange granules; bilobed nucleus – Basophils (less than 1%) • Large, abundant, violet granules (obscure a large S-shaped nucleus) • Agranulocytes – Lymphocytes (25% to 33%) • Variable amounts of bluish cytoplasm (scanty to abundant); ovoid/round, uniform dark violet nucleus – Monocytes (3% to 8%) • Usually largest WBC; ovoid, kidney-, or horseshoe-shaped nucleus 18-106 Granulocytes • Neutrophils—aggressively antibacterial – Neutrophilia—rise in number of neutrophils in response to bacterial infection • Eosinophils—increased numbers in parasitic infections, collagen diseases, allergies, diseases of spleen and CNS – Phagocytosis of antigen–antibody complexes, allergens, and inflammatory chemicals – Release enzymes to destroy large parasites • Basophils—increased numbers in chickenpox, sinusitis, diabetes – Secrete histamine (vasodilator): speeds flow of blood to an injured area – Secrete heparin (anticoagulant): promotes the mobility of other WBCs in the area 18-107 Agranulocytes • Lymphocytes—increased numbers in diverse infections and immune responses – Destroy cells (cancer, foreign, and virally infected cells) – “Present” antigens to activate other immune cells – Coordinate actions of other immune cells – Secrete antibodies and provide immune memory 18-108 Agranulocytes • Monocytes—increased numbers in viral infections and inflammation – Leave bloodstream and transform into macrophages • Phagocytize pathogens and debris • “Present” antigens to activate other immune cells— antigen-presenting cells (APCs) 18-109 The Leukocyte Life History • Leukopoiesis—production of white blood cells – Hemopoietic stem cells (HSCs) differentiate into: • Myeloblasts—form neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils • Monoblasts—form monocytes • Lymphoblasts give rise to all forms of lymphocytes – T lymphocytes complete development in thymus • Red bone marrow stores and releases granulocytes and monocytes 18-110 The Leukocyte Life Cycle • Circulating WBCs do not stay in bloodstream – Granulocytes leave in 8 hours and live 5 days longer – Monocytes leave in 20 hours, transform into macrophages, and live for several years – Lymphocytes provide long-term immunity (decades), being continuously recycled from blood to tissue fluid to lymph and back to the blood 18-111 Leukopoiesis Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Pluripotent stem cell Colony-forming units (CFUs) Mature cells Precursor cells leaves Eosinophilic CFU Eosinophilic myeloblast Eosinophilic promyelocyte Eosinophilic myelocyte Eosinophil Basophilic CFU Basophilic myeloblast Basophilic promyelocyte Basophilic myelocyte Basophil Neutrophilic CFU Neutrophilic myeloblast Neutrophilic promyelocyte Neutrophilic myelocyte Neutrophil Monocytic CFU Monoblast Promonocyte Monocyte B lymphocyte B prolymphocyte Figure 18.18 Lymphocytic CFU T prolymphocyte T lymphocyte NK prolymphocyte NK cell Lymphoblast 18-112 Leukocyte Disorders • Leukopenia—low WBC count: below 5,000 WBCs/L – Causes: radiation, poisons, infectious disease – Effects: elevated risk of infection • Leukocytosis—high WBC count: above 10,000 WBCs/L – Causes: infection, allergy, disease – Differential WBC count: identifies what percentage of the total WBC count consist of each type of leukocyte 18-113 Leukocyte Disorders • Leukemia—cancer of hemopoietic tissue usually producing a very high number of circulating leukocytes – Myeloid leukemia: uncontrolled granulocyte production – Lymphoid leukemia: uncontrolled lymphocyte or monocyte production – Acute leukemia: appears suddenly, progresses rapidly, death within months – Chronic leukemia: undetected for months, survival time 3 years – Effects: normal cell percentages disrupted; impaired clotting; opportunistic infections 18-114 Normal and Leukemic Blood Figure 18.19a,b 18-115 The Complete Blood Count • Includes several values – Hematocrit – Hemoglobin concentration – Total count for RBCs, reticulocytes, WBCs, and platelets – Differential WBC count – RBC size and hemoglobin concentration per RBC 18-116 Platelets and Hemostasis— The Control of Bleeding • Hemostasis—the cessation of bleeding – Stopping potentially fatal leaks – Hemorrhage: excessive bleeding • Three hemostatic mechanisms – Vascular spasm – Platelet plug formation – Blood clotting (coagulation) • Platelets play an important role in all three 18-117 Platelet Form and Function • Platelets—small fragments of megakaryocyte cells – 2 to 4 m diameter; contain “granules” – Platelet contains a complex internal structure and an open canalicular system – Amoeboid movement and phagocytosis • Normal platelet count—130,000 to 400,000 platelets/L 18-118 Platelet Form and Function • Platelet functions – Secrete vasoconstrictors that help reduce blood loss – Stick together to form platelet plugs to seal small breaks – Secrete procoagulants or clotting factors to promote clotting – Initiate formation of clot-dissolving enzyme – Chemically attract neutrophils and monocytes to sites of inflammation – Phagocytize and destroy bacteria – Secrete growth factors that stimulate mitosis to repair blood vessels 18-119 Hemostasis • Vascular spasm—prompt constriction of a broken vessel – Most immediate protection against blood loss • Causes – Pain receptors • Some directly innervate blood vessels to constrict – Smooth muscle injury – Platelets release serotonin (vasoconstrictor) • Effects – Prompt constriction of a broken vessel • Pain receptors—short duration (minutes) • Smooth muscle injury—longer duration – Provides time for other two clotting pathways 18-120 Hemostasis • Platelet plug formation – Intact vessels have a smooth endothelium coated with prostacyclin—a platelet repellant – Broken vessel exposes collagen – Platelet pseudopods stick to damaged vessel and other platelets – Pseudopods contract - draw together a platelet plug – Platelets degranulate releasing a variety of substances • Serotonin is a vasoconstrictor • ADP attracts and degranulates more platelets • Thromboxane A2, an eicosanoid, promotes platelet aggregation, degranulation, and vasoconstriction – Positive feedback cycle is active until break in small vessel is sealed 18-121 Hemostasis • Coagulation (clotting)—last and most effective defense against bleeding – Conversion of plasma protein fibrinogen into insoluble fibrin threads to form framework of clot – Procoagulants (clotting factors)—usually produced by the liver; are present in plasma • Activate one factor and it will activate the next to form a reaction cascade – Extrinsic pathway • Factors released by damaged tissues begin cascade – Intrinsic pathway • Factors found in blood begin cascade (platelet degranulation) 18-122 Coagulation 18-123 Figure 18.22 Coagulation • Extrinsic pathway – Initiated by release of tissue thromboplastin (factor III) from damaged tissue – Cascade to factor VII, V, and X (fewer steps) • Intrinsic pathway – Initiated by platelets releasing Hageman factor (factor XII) – Cascade to factor XI to IX to VIII to X • Calcium required for either pathway 18-124 Reaction Cascade in Clotting Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. 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Factor XII Factor IX Factor VIII Factor X Figure 18.23 Prothrombin activator Reaction cascade (time) Factor XI Thrombin Fibrin • Rapid clotting—each activated cofactor activates many more molecules in next step of sequence 18-125 Completion of Coagulation • Activation of factor X – Leads to production of prothrombin activator • Prothrombin activator – Converts prothrombin to thrombin • Thrombin – Converts fibrinogen into fibrin monomers – Monomers covalently bind to form fibrin polymer – Factor XIII cross links fibrin polymer strands • Positive feedback—thrombin speeds up formation of prothrombin activator • Overall efficiency in coagulation can be measured with bleeding time after a 1 mm deep incision 18-126 The Fate of Blood Clots • Clot retraction occurs within 30 minutes • Platelet-derived growth factor secreted by platelets and endothelial cells – Mitotic stimulant for fibroblasts and smooth muscle to multiply and repair damaged vessel • Fibrinolysis—dissolution of a clot – Factor XII speeds up formation of kallikrein enzyme – Kallikrein converts plasminogen into plasmin, a fibrindissolving enzyme that breaks up the clot 18-127 Clotting Disorders • Deficiency of any clotting factor can shut down the coagulation cascade • Hemophilia—family of hereditary diseases characterized by deficiencies of one factor or another • Sex-linked recessive (on X chromosome) – Hemophilia A missing factor VIII (83% of cases) – Hemophilia B missing factor IX (15% of cases) • Hemophilia C missing factor XI (autosomal) 18-128 Clotting Disorders • Physical exertion causes bleeding and excruciating pain – Transfusion of plasma or purified clotting factors – Factor VIII produced by transgenic bacteria • Hematomas—masses of clotted blood in the tissues 18-129 Clotting Disorders • Thrombosis—abnormal clotting in unbroken vessel – Thrombus: clot • Most likely to occur in leg veins of inactive people – Pulmonary embolism: clot may break free, travel from veins to lungs • Embolus—anything that can travel in the blood and block blood vessels • Infarction (tissue death) may occur if clot blocks blood supply to an organ (MI or stroke) – 650,000 Americans die annually of thromboembolism (traveling blood clots) 18-130 Clinical Management of Blood Clotting • Goal—prevent formation of clots or dissolve existing clots • Preventing clots – Vitamin K is required for formation of clotting factors • Coumarin, warfarin (Coumadin)—vitamin K antagonists – Aspirin suppresses thromboxane A2 – Other anticoagulants discovered in animal research • Medicinal leeches used since 1884 (hirudin) • Snake venom from vipers (arvin) 18-131 Clinical Management of Blood Clotting • Dissolving clots that have already formed – Streptokinase: enzyme made by streptococci bacteria • Used to dissolve clots in coronary vessels • Digests almost any protein – Tissue plasminogen activator (TPA): works faster, is more specific, and now made by transgenic bacteria – Hementin: produced by giant Amazon leech 18-132