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Functions of The Human Circulatory System • The human circulatory system, or cardiovascular system, has the great job of transporting oxygen and nutrients to the organs and tissues of the body, and to carry away waste products. • It regulates the body’s temperature and increases blood flow to meet demands during exercise. • This system also sends parts of the immune system (white blood cells and antibodies) to fight off foreign substances upon their invasion. • Should injury or bleeding occur, it sends clotting cells and proteins to help stop bleeding and promote healing. Follow me! Bluish, deoxygenated blood enters the heart at the right atrium, through the vena cava. It then drops down to the right ventricle through a valve that opens only in one A single drop of blood goes longnext direction. Entering the pulmonary artery, theablood goes to the through lungs, wherethe it is “reimbursed” with oxygen, way human body. In becoming bright red again. It goes back to the heart fact, all theveins arteries, veins, and through the if pulmonary to the left atrium. This voyage through thein lungs is pulmonary circulation. Its capillaries an adult human’s body function is to fill the blood with oxygen from the lungs. placed to end,thethe Next,were it’s down to the end left ventricle, mosttotal powerful chamber of the heart. stretch From here nearly it enters the aorta, to length would two and the body’s arteries, then arterioles, to veinioles, to times around veins, a andhalf finally back to the venathe cava.earth’s This journey throughout the body is called systemic circulation. Its equator. This is over 100,000 km mission is to bring oxygen to the organs and tissues of (60,000 miles). the body, and to carry away waste materials back to the lungs, where they are exhaled. When blood is being transmitted through the heart, that is coronary Blood on the right side of the heart is bluish and the oxygen has all been used up. Blood on the left side, however, is bright red and full of oxygen to take to the body. BLOOD • Blood is made up of red and white blood cells, and platelets, all carried in plasma: – Red blood cells: bear oxygen • Hemoglobin: bears iron (inside the red b.c.’s) – White blood cells: fight disease (a part of the immune system) – Platelets: clot blood--this slows, stops bleeding – Plasma: yellowish, it consists of water, salts, proteins, vitamins, minerals, hormones, dissolved gases, and fats. BLOOD PRESSURE • Blood pressure is the pressure generated when the pumping action of the heart propels blood to the arteries. • It’s measured using a sphygmomanometer, wrapped around the upper arm. This is displayed as a ratio--average is 120/80. • Blood pressure is measured during systole and diastole. – Systole: active pumping phase of the heart. – Diastole: resting phase between heartbeats. Heartbeats are triggered by myocardium, the muscle forming the walls of the heart’s four chambers. This muscle rhythmically and continuously contracts to pump blood. The pumping phase of the heartbeat consists of two cycles: systole, the pumping of the heart; and diastole, the resting in between pumps. DISEASES OF THE HEART • Hypertension - High blood pressure: blood vessels narrow, making heart pump harder. - Eventually the heart will need more oxygen. This can lead to heart failure or brain stroke. • Atherosclerosis - High concentrations of cholesterol lead to plaque, which deposits on the sides of arteries, reducing blood flow. - Blood clots can form where plaque roughens artery walls. - This causes damage to organs. * When a brain artery is blocked--stroke. * When a coronary artery is blocked--heart attack, and heart muscle is destroyed.