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The Circulatory System • Recall: • Cellular respiration: the process of a cell converting glucose into energy. • Oxygen is an important reactant required for this process: • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy • Oxygen needs to get to all parts of the body!!! This is the main purpose of the circulatory system!! FUNCTIONS 1) Regulate body temperature 2) Transport substances around the body – oxygen from lungs to cells! – carbon dioxide from cells to lungs (to get rid of)! – nutrients (e.g. from intestines) and wastes (e.g. to kidneys) – hormones – infection-fighting white blood cells and chemicals from immune system sho show video Components of the circulatory system • 1) Heart : made up of cardiac muscle, nerve, and connective tissues pumps blood through the body and back to lungs tissues and inner surface covered by epithelial tissues to protect heart from damage and allow blood to flow freely. 2) BLOOD • Blood cells (45%) – red (transport oxygen) – more 43% – white (infection-fighting) – 1% – platelets (help in blood clotting) – 1% • Plasma (55%) 3) Blood Vessels • A) Arteries: mostly carry OXYGENATED (red) blood AWAY from heart. • B) Veins: mostly carry DEOXYGENATED (dark red) blood towards the heart. • C) Capillaries: link arteries and veins together Cycle • Oxygen diffuses from lungs into capillaries • oxygenated blood goes to heart where it is pumped through the arteries to the rest of the body • blood dumps oxygen into tissues (diffuses through capillary walls) and picks up CO2 • deoxygenated blood travels through veins back to heart which pumps it back to capillaries in the lungs CO2 diffuses into lungs and is exhaled Circulatory System • Summary: • Main functions: – 1) regulate body temp – 2) transport substances around the body • Components – Heart, blood, and blood vessels • Types of blood vessels: – Arteries (away), veins (towards), capillaries Arteries • Carry blood at high pressure and hence have • Very thick, stretchy walls • Damaged arteries spurt in time to heart beat • Aorta: largest artery (diameter of a garden hose) – artery through which heart pumps blood out to body • Carry blood at low pressure • Have valves to prevent backflow of blood against gravity Veins Capillaries • Connect arteries and veins • Walls are very thin (i.e. one cell thick) to allow for diffusion (of oxygen into tissues and into CO2 bloodstream) Blood Vessels How Blood Travels thru Vessels Capillaries in the lungs heart arteries capillaries in the body veins heart capillaries in the lungs Cardiovascular System The Heart • Size of a fist; less than a pound • Leans towards left in your chest, flanked by lungs; rests on diaphram Interesting Facts • The heart beat is strong enough to squirt blood 30 feet • The longer a boy’s ring finger is, the less likely they are to have a heart attack (according to one study) • The human heart beats ~35 million times per year • The heart pumps ~1,000,000 barrels of blood in a lifetime • Most heart attacks occur between 8-9 a.m. Interesting Facts • The blue whale has the largest heart – it weighs ~ one ton • The hummingbird has a heart that beats 1000 times per minute • Your entire volume of blood goes through your entire body once every minute • Humans have ~60,000 miles of blood vessels in their bodies (more than twice the circumference of the earth!) • Your heart beats 100,000 times and pumps ~2000 gallons of blood every day • Pig and baboon hearts have been transplanted into humans Heart Diseases: • Coronary artery diseases: artery can become blocked by deposits of fat, cholesterol, etc • Blood (with oxygen) cannot get to heart muscle – heart can stop pumping (heart attack) • Cause can be genetic or poor diet, exercise, or habits Coronary Artery Disease • When Atherosclerosis affects the arteries that supply the heart muscle • Symptoms: short of breath after simple exertion, angina (chest pain) • Risk: MI, cardiac arrest, death How is CAD treated? • Medication • Angioplasty (balloon surgery) – balloon is inserted and inflated in blocked vessel to compress fatty mass against the artery wall How is CAD Treated? • Stent – wire mesh inserted into the artery to expand its lumen • Coronary Artery Bypass – arteries are removed from leg and grafted into the heart to restore circulation Vessel Disorders Varicose Veins: twisted, dilated veins resulting from pooling of blood due to long periods of standing, obesity, or inactivity Vessel Disorders Thrombophlebitis: inflammation of a vessel due to clot formation & poor circulation. Clot can become an embolus if freed. • Weaking in the wall of a vessel, causing it to balloon outwards. • Rupture of the site causes Aneurysm – Stroke (if in the brain) – Death (in a large artery – aorta). • Coronary arteries exit the aorta & supply oxygen/blood to heart muscle (myocardium) • Coronary veins pick up & return deoxygenated blood from myocardium Cardiac Circulation Defects in Coronary Circulation • Angina Pectoris: impaired circulation to myocardium causes oxygen deprivation & pain • Myocardial infarction: “heart attack” – blockage of circulation to section of myocardium causes the muscle to infarct (die) Pulmonary Circulation • Right ventricle pumps deoxygenated blood through pulmonary artery to the lungs • The blood picks up O2 from the lungs and dumps CO2 into the lungs • Oxygenated blood is returned to the left atrium thru the pulmonary vein The Circulation Play the Game Number the parts 1 – 17 (just write the correct order on a piece of paper). Pass your paper to a classmate when you finish. We will grade them as a class. Congestive Heart Failure • Heart is ‘worn out’ from hypertension, multiple MI, atherosclerosis, or age • Heart pumps too weakly to meet tissue needs • If one side is weaker than the other, blood will back up in system Congestive Heart Failure • Left ventricle is failing: – Pulmonary congestion – Pulmonary edema (blood in lungs) causes suffocation • Right ventricle is failing: – Peripheral congestion – Edema in distal body parts (ankles, feet) Pulmonary Edema Pulmonary edema (A); normal lung (B) Peripheral Edema Swelling of feet and ankles due to CHF Conduction System of the Heart Heart is under two types of control: • Autonomic Nervous system – Sympathetic: speeds up contractions – Parasympathetic: the “brakes” that slows down contractions • Intrinsic Conduction System – Also called “nodal system” – Heart determines its own rate of contractions Intrinsic Conduction System • Nodes are heart tissue that stimulate heart muscle to depolarize (contract) • Depolarization moves from base to apex • Different areas of the heart have different nodes, each with a different rate • Node rate gets slower as it moves downwards • Faster nodes will override slower nodes Nodes (you need to know these) 3 Stages: • SA node fires, atria contract (depolarize) • Impulse travels to AV node, then travels thru bundle of His, bundle branches, & Purkinje fibers – ventricles contract (depolarize) • Contraction of ventricles has ‘wringing’ action, pushing blood upward and out through large arteries • Heart muscle repolarizes Parts of the Conduction System SA node: • “The Heart’s Pacemaker” • In atria • Normally sets the pace of 60 – 70 • SA can increase rate when stimulated by drugs, fever, or sympathetic NS (exercise, stress, emotion) AV Node: • Between atria & ventricles • Special tissues transmit signal from SA to AV node • Intrinsic rate: 40 - 60 Bundle of His: • Transmits impulse to ventricles • Rate: 30 – 40 beats/min Bundle Branches: • Within ventricular muscles • Rate: 20 – 30 beats/min Purkinje fibers: • Terminal end of branches Parts of the Conduction System What if Damage Occurs? • If SA node is damaged or its signal is blocked, the AV node takes over setting the pace (40-60/min) • If AV node is next damaged, the bundles set the rate (20 – 40/min) What is a Pacemaker? If heart is unable to generate impulse, or pace is too slow, mechanical pacemaker is surgically implanted to provide artificial impulses Electrocardiogram (ECG/EKG) • Electrical impulses in heart are measured with ECG • Electrical activity is translated into waves Electrocardiogram (ECG/EKG) • P Wave: atria depolarize • QRS complex: ventricles depolarize • T wave: repolarization • Heart Monitor hooked up with pads on chest • Abnormalities in ECG used to diagnose heart damage • Diagnostic signs: changes in shape of wave, distance between waves, lack of waves… Abnormalities in ECG Irregular Heart Rhythms • Tachycardia: heart is beating too fast • Bradycardia: heart is beating too slow • Heart Block: no connection between atria & ventricles – ventricles beat at their own rate • Ventricular Fibrillation: heart is ‘shivering’ – no contractions or pulse (cardiac arrest) • Asystole: dead heart – no electrical activity Comparing Rates • Normal Sinus Rhythm • Sinus Bradycardia • Sinus Tachycardia • Elevated ST segment (sign of a MI) • Ventricular Tachycardia • Heart Block • PVC (premature ventricular fibrillation) • Ventricular Fibrillation • Asystole Cardiac Cycle Cardiac Cycle: The events within one heartbeat. Three main stages: • Mid-to-late diastole: SL valves are closed, AV open; atria contract; blood is forced into ventricles • Ventricular systole: ventricular pressure forces AV closed; SL forced open; blood rushes out of ventricles; atria relax & refill • Early diastole: SL shut; AV open; ventricles relax and refill passively Heart Sounds • Cardiac cycle heard with a stethoscope • Two sounds: “lub dup” (pause) “lub dup” (pause) ….. – Lub = closing of AV valves (ventricular systole) – Dup = Closing of semilunar valves (between ventricular systole & diastole) • Murmurs: abnormal heart sounds that usually indicate valve problems Valve Disorders • Leaky Valves: caused by incompetent or deformed valves that force the heart to re-pump blood because of backflow Stenosis Valves are stiff and do not open completely. Heart has to pump harder Murmur: stenosis • The most common valve disorder (5-10% of people) • Mitral valve opens (prolapses) into atrium when shutting & allows blood backflow Mitral Valve Prolapse Cardiac Output • Cardiac Output: the amount of blood pumped by each side of the heart per minute • Cardiac output = heart rate X stroke volume • Stroke volume = the amount of blood pumped with each contraction What is the cardiac output if…. HR = 75 bpm; SV = 70 ml/beat? This is the normal cardiac output for a resting adult. How is the output affected with exercise? Do you think it increases or decreases? What affects Stroke Volume? (you don’t have to write this down) Increase in Stroke volume: • Increased venous blood return – exercise (muscles force blood into heart) – Slow hr (more time to fill ventricles) Decrease in stroke volume • Decreased venous return – Hemorrhage (less blood volume) – Tachycardia (not enough time to fill) What affects Heart Rate? (you don’t have to write this either) Increase: • Decline in SV (heart compensates by hr) • Babies and kids • Females • During exercise • Sympathetic NS Decrease: • Parasympathetic NS • Getting older • Males • Being fit (heart is more efficient) • Cold temperatures Taken to assess overall health status • Arterial pulse • Blood Pressure • Respiratory Rate • Temperature • Alternating expansion and recoil of arteries with each heart beat • Measured in beats per minute • Normal resting pulse: 60 – 100 bpm • Taken at pulse points: place where pulse is easily palpated (felt) Arterial Pulse Pulse Points Can also be used as pressure points to stop bleeding Blood Pressure • Pressure of the blood against artery walls • Measured as systolic/diastolic (ex. 120/80) – Systolic: pressure at peak of contraction – Diastolic: pressure during ventricular relaxation • Can be taken by: – Auscultation (listening for pulse) – Palpation (feeling for pulse) • Normal: 100 + age / 60-90 • Cardiac Output (blood pumped per min) • Peripheral Resistance – friction inside vessel that hampers flow of blood – Usually results from narrowing of arteries What Determines the BP? What affects BP Increases BP: • Atherosclerosis • Thick blood • Drugs/nicotine • Obesity Decreases BP: • Shock/blood loss • MI • Drugs • Physical fitness Problems with BP • Hypotension (low BP): – Systolic < 90mm/Hg – Cause: MI; warning sign of shock; athletes • Hypertension (high BP) – Systolic >140; Diastolic >90 – Heart is forced to work hard for extended time – Vessels damaged due to higher pressure – Causes: obesity, diet, exercise, smoking, genes – Risks: heart attack, stroke