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Blood Vessels Circulation • All blood is constantly moving along the circulatory system • The most vital nutrient which is used most quickly is oxygen, so blood is usually divided into oxygenated and deoxygenated blood in graphs – Realistically even “deoxygenated” blood usually still has about 2550% oxygen load Road Analogy • If cells are houses and must receive service via streets, the largest blood vessels are freeways • Note that like a freeway, major blood vessels such as arteries and veins do NOT deliver oxygen or nutrients but rather move blood quickly to different parts of the body • Almost all nutrient and waste exchange happens in small, leaky blood vessels called capillaries Arteries and Veins • Arteries move blood away from the heart • Arteries in the body have high pressure and are bright red from the oxygen content • Veins move blood towards the heart and have very low pressure – Deoxygenated blood is NOT blue, but it is dark, and the vein coverings make it appear blue Blood Vessel Sizes • Main arteries lead directly away from the heart before branching into arterioles • Arterioles branch further to become capillaries, then rejoin to become venules • Venules combine to form veins – Many veins have valves to prevent backflow since there is so little blood pressure – Blood is moved through veins by muscle movement, which is why stretching feels good Capillaries • All tissues (except cartilage, epidermis and the lens of the eye) have capillaries that blood flows into from the arteries • Capillaries are very thin and leaky so nutrients can diffuse out of the blood into the surrounding tissues • Also allows wastes to diffuse into the blood Anatomy of Blood Vessels • Major blood vessels (arteries and veins) have smooth muscle and coverings – Smooth muscle helps squeeze blood through and constricts when the blood vessel is damaged • All blood vessels have a smooth inner lining called endothelium which reduces friction/turbulence • The inner space of a vessel is called the lumen Blood Flow Regulation • When a blood vessel increases in diameter it is said to vasodilate – Increases blood flow to an area – Provides additional nutrients, helps be more active and also helps heal damaged tissue • When a blood vessel decreases in diameter it is said to vasoconstrict – Cuts off blood supply to ensure more blood goes elsewhere, or to prevent bleeding Variable Flow • Capillaries can also be opened and closed to change blood flow to different organs – Blood flow to skin = “flush” to help cooling – Blood flow to muscles = adrenaline rush – Blood flow to digestive system = food coma • Much of this is accomplished with smooth muscles around the start of the capillaries, called precapillary sphincters Blood Pressure • Blood pressure decreases as the blood travels through arteries, capillaries, and veins – The more viscous the blood (from more RBCs) the faster the pressure drops • The blood pressure at the start of the capillary squeezes plasma into the tissues (this is called capillary blood pressure) – The lower pressure at the other end of the capillary sucks fluid back in, which is called blood colloid osmotic pressure Blood Volume • Two hormones work against each other to balance blood pressure: – Aldosterone (secreted by adrenal cortex) causes sodium retention and therefore water retention – ANP (atrial natriuretic peptide) is secreted by the atria of the heart and promote excretion of salt and water by the kidneys – Question: what does ADH do? • Note that the heart literally asks the kidneys to pee more when it gets overworked Obesity and Blood Pressure • Clearly junk food is “unhealthy” but why exactly? – Extra calories are stored as excess body fat, increasing blood volume – Extra cholesterol above what’s needed can form plaques that can block blood vessels – Extra sodium increases blood volume and water retention • These factors may, as a pattern, lead to obesity, which is strongly correlated with heart disease Hooray cheerful weekend! • Next week is the exam week! • Don’t forget the online quiz!!!!1