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Our Body System will be the Circulation System The circulatory system is responsible for pumping ______ blood around the body. We need blood to be taken around the oxygen body because blood contains ________ glucose These are needed so and _______. cells in our bodies can that all the ____ energy through _________. respiration produce _____ The main organs in the circulatory system heart the lungs and the kidneys. are the _____, Words – energy, heart, blood, glucose, respiration, oxygen, cells Fascinating Facts! It is about the size of a fist. It beats on average 70 times per minute. That’s 4200 per hour. Approximately one hundred thousand beats per day. 365 million beats per year. About 30 billion beats in an average life time of 80 years. Fascinating Facts! An adult heart pumps 7,500 litres of blood daily. It takes 20 seconds to pump blood to every cell in your body. Blood is cleaned by the kidneys. If you lined up all the blood vessels in your body end to end, they would wrap around the earth twice! The Heart There is one muscle in your body that is vital for your survival... The Heart. The heart is a involuntary muscle. This means it works on its own without us having to think about making it beat. The Heart The heart is responsible for two things. 1. Through the blood it pumps, the heart provides oxygen and nutrients to our cells to keep us alive. 2. Carry away wastes from these active cells to special organs that rid them from our bodies. The Heart The heart has four different hollow areas called chambers. There are two chambers on each side of the heart. The Heart The heart is actually two pumps in one. The right side receives blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs to get oxygen. The left side receives the oxygenated blood from the lungs and pumps it around the body. The “Double Circulatory” 1.System Deoxygenated 2. The blood blood is pumped from the heart to the lungs 4. The oxygen leaves the blood to be used for respiration in the body and the blood goes back to the heart receives oxygen and is pumped back to the heart 3. The oxygenated blood is then pumped to the rest of the body Label the lines on the diagram - words to use - left atrium - left ventricle - right atrium - right ventricle What’s our blood made of? What’s our blood made of? Blood is made of a clear liquid called plasma (blood is in fact 55% plasma) and 3 types of cells (these make up the other 45% of blood) these cells are: White blood cells – these help fight bugs Red blood cells – the haemoglobin in these carry the oxygen round our body Platelets – these stop bleeding by forming clots. Arteries, veins and capillaries Arteries carry high pressure blood away from the heart. They have no valves and have elastic walls that contract Capillaries have thin walls (one cell thick) to allow glucose and oxygen to pass through. Also used to connect arteries to veins. “Lumen” Veins carry low pressure blood back to the heart. They have thinner, less elastic walls and have valves to prevent backflow of blood. How blood gets back to the heart? By veins under low pressure The blood moves back to the heart because of muscle contractions Sometimes when we are not active for a while (eg on long plane flights) our muscles don’t contract and blood pools in our legs Remember veins are the only blood vessels that have valves to stop backflow Blood Pressure (BP) BP is the measurement of force applied to the artery walls as the heart pumps blood around the body. Pressure is determined by the force, the amount of blood pumped and the size and flexibility of the arteries. Blood Pressure Is Affected By: • • • • • • • • Volume of blood Size and condition of arteries Volume of water in the body Salt content in body-fluid shifts/osmosis Condition of the kidneys Nervous system control Blood vessels-constriction/dilation Various chemicals- eg Adrenaline Normal Blood Pressure (BP) • BP Should be <120/80 and if >140/90 is considered Hypertension • Changes in BP depending on age, activity, temperature, posture, physical state, emotional state and medication use • BP is lowest when sleeping and rises as you get up. Hypotension • Inadequate flow of blood to heart, brain, kidneys and other vital organs • Body will attempt to compensate with raised HR,BP • If not corrected the inadequate supply of oxygen leads to changes in some organs e.g. heart and kidneys and eventually death Your Task Write up a flow chart that describes the movement of blood through the heart and it’s major vessels. Try to make the flow chart into a complete cycle. Your Task 1. Deoxygenated blood enters the right atrium from the vena cava. 2. It then passes through the trcuspid valve and into the right ventricle. Your Task 5. Deoxygenated blood is then pumped from the right ventricle to the lungs by the pulmonary artery 6. Oxygenated blood is then pumped back to the left atrium Your Task 7. Blood is then pumped from the right atrium through the mitral valve into the left ventricle 8. blood is then pumped from the left ventricle to the body by the aorta How does the heart keep us healthy? 1. By supplying oxygen to the cells in our organs 2. It supplies glucose to our cells (Remember the respiration reaction where: glucose + oxygen react to form energy and the waste products – carbon doxide and energy) 3. By removing waste products like CO2 ,water and heat from our body What does plasma have in it? Nutrients eg Glucose Parts of the blood and their function Red blood cells – carry oxygen from the lungs to the cells of the body White blood cells swallow foreign bodies Others produce antibodies which attach to the foreign microbes and make them inactive.(fight disease) Platelets – cells that blood clot Plasma – takes glucose to the cells and CO2 away Why does our heart beat faster when we exercise? Because our muscles need more oxygen How can we tell if someone is fit? by getting them to do exercise and then timing how long it takes for their heart rate to return to normal Why do we have circular bones in our trachea? – to give it strength and flexibility bones Remember them from our dissection? How do we breath using our diaphragm? Look at your diagram Arthrosclerosis (aka heart disease) Is the narrowing of arteries (with plaque build up) that supply the heart muscle (coronary arteries) Caused when to much fatty food is eaten ,smoking and not enough exercise Respiration equation glucose + oxygen carbon + water + energy dioxide Why are there capillaries around alveoli– Because they are small and thin to give large surface area for gases to dissolve Why are alveoli moist? The moisture dissolves oxygen to helps with gas exchange through the capilliary walls Remember to learn your parts of the heart and which way blood flows through it Why is the heart thicker on the left side?