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Welcome Back! • Quiz today postponed to Friday • Friday Jan 13th: QUIZ Blood Components + Blood Types • Tuesday Jan 17th: QUIZ Heart + Circulation anatomy • Thursday Jan 19th: QUIZ Lymphatic System • Friday Jan 20th: TEST Circulation System + Lymph • Tuesday Jan 31st: Midyear Exam Blood Vessels • Capillaries – Smaller, branched off, narrow arteries called arterioles branch off and narrow further into capillaries – Smallest blood vessels Fig. 6.34 – So narrow that 1 RBC travel single file through them – Walls are very thin (made up of single cell layer) – Thin walls ease exchange of O2 and CO2 between blood and organ cells (as well as nutrients and waste) Blood Vessels • Veins – Veins in lower parts of body (eg: leg) blood must flow against gravity – Veins have valves to keep blood from flowing downward • Pg 183 Fig. 6.35 – Once the capillaries have irrigated the organs (flushing or washing out) they unite to venules, that turn into larger veins – Blood travels from the heart through the veins – Pressure inside vein is very low – Blood moves forward to return the heart with muscular contractions – These press against the veins and cause the blood to circulate Path of Blood • Arteries arterioles capillaries venules veins The Heart • Heart is an organ that stimulates the movement of blood • In an adult it is the size of a fist and is located between the lungs in the thoracic cage • What does the inside of the heart look like and how does it work? • Fig. 6.37 • Blood flows from atrium to ventricle on right and left side • Blood passes through valves to do so (atrioventricular valves) • Atrioventricular valves keep blood from moving backwards Inside the heart • 4 cavities – Right atrium – Right ventricle – Left atrium – Left ventricle • Right atrium linked with right ventricle • Left atrium linked to the left ventricle • Right and left side of the heart do not communicate – They are separated by a partition: Septum Heart and blood vessels • Several blood vessels are attached to the heart • Veins: superior and inferior vena cava and pulmonary veins - attached to both atria (plural of atrium) allowing blood to enter heart • Arteries: aorta and pulmonary arteries – attached to ventricles to carry blood as it exits Function of heart • Blood enters the Atria, when the heart is at rest and relaxed – Filling phase = DIASTOLE • Atrias contract simultaneously forcing blood into Ventricles, then Ventricles contract forcing blood into arteries of the heart. – Contraction phase = SYSTOLE • Pulse you feel in your throat or wrist is from the contraction of the left ventricle – Heart rate vary from person to person…why? – Best to take Resting Heart Rate lying down! Circulation Routes Pg. 185 • Since the heart is split into 2 parts (by the partition) blood can be pumped out of each side along 2 different routes – Right Side = Pulmonary Circulation – Left Side = Systemic Circulation • Use red and blue to colour oxygenated and deoxygenated blood on diagram • Worksheet • P. 195 # 10 – 15 Heart Bypass Surgery • If time allows… • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YUAB_THem8