Title: Blood and the Cardiovascular System
1Blood and the Cardiovascular System
2Blood Path Through the Body
- Blood is pumped throughout the body by the heart
- Travels from the heart through arteries, then
through capillaries where oxygen and nutrients
diffuse into surrounding tissue and carbon
dioxide and waste diffuse from the tissue into
the blood - Oxygen deficient blood travels back to the heart
through veins
3Blood Composition and Function
- Blood is a specialized form of connective tissue
in which living blood cells, the formed elements,
are suspended by nonliving matrix called plasma. - Blood spun in centrifuge will have the heavier
formed elements at the bottom and the less dense
plasma at the top - The reddish mass at the bottom layer would be
primarily erythrocytes (red blood cells)
Erythrocytes constitute about 45 of total blood
volume - There is a white thin layer called the buffy coat
that is primarily composed of leukocytes (white
blood cells) that act in various ways to protect
the body and platelets which are cell fragments
that help the body stop bleeding (All of these
constitute less than 1 of blood volume) - Plasma makes up the remaining 55 of blood
4Blood Composition and Function
5Blood Composition and Function
6Blood Composition and Function
- Blood accounts for about 8 of body weight with a
average volume of 5-6 L in adult males and 4-5 L
in adult females - Color varies from scarlet red (oxygen rich) to
dark red (oxygen poor) - Blood is more dense than water and about five
times more viscous - Blood has a pH that runs from 7.35 to 7.45 and a
temperature of about 38 degrees Celsius or 100
degrees Fahrenheit, slightly higher than body
temperature
7Blood Composition and Function
- Functions of blood include
- Distribution
- Oxygen from lungs and nutrients from the
digestive tract - Transporting waste products from cells to
elimination sites - Transport hormones from the endocrine organs to
their target organs - Regulation
- Maintain appropriate body temperature by
absorbing and distributing heat throughout the
body and to the skin to encourage heat loss - Maintain normal pH in body tissues
- Maintain adequate fluid volume in the circulatory
system - Protection
- Prevent blood loss with platelets and blood
proteins initiating clot formation - Prevent infection with antibodies, complement
proteins and white blood cells
8Blood Plasma
- Although it is mostly water (90) it does contain
over 100 dissolved solutes including nutrients,
gases, hormones, wastes, ions, and proteins - Plasma proteins which account for 8 of plasma
weight are the most abundant plasma solute and
they serve a variety of functions - Albumin accounts for 60 of plasma protein that
helps carry certain molecules through
circulation, act as a blood buffer, and is a
major contributor to osmotic pressure (the
pressure that helps keep water in the blood
stream)
9 Formed Elements General
- The formed elements of blood are erythrocytes,
leukocytes, and platelets - Erythrocytes have no nucleus or organelles
- Platelets are fragments of cells
- Most of the formed elements survive in the
bloodstream for only a few days - Most blood cells do not divide but instead are
continuously renewed by division of cells in bone
marrow
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11Formed Elements Erythrocytes
- Small in diameter that appear as a flattened disc
with depressed center - Virtually a bag of hemoglobin, the protein that
functions for gas transport of oxygen and about
20 of carbon dioxide released by cells - The erythrocyte structure contributes to its
function by - Small size and biconcave shape provide huge
surface area relative to volume to help with gas
exchange - Discounting water content the erythrocyte is over
97 hemoglobin - Because erythrocytes do not contain any
mitochondria and generate ATP by anaerobic
mechanisms they do not consume any oxygen that
they are transporting
12Formed Elements Erythrocytes
- Hemoglobin, the protein that makes red blood
cells red, binds easily and reversibly with
oxygen - Hemoglobin is made of the protein globin and
bound to the red pigment heme. Each heme group
(which there are four) bears an atom of iron at
its center which oxygen binds to therefore every
hemoglobin molecule can carry four molecules of
oxygen - Some carbon dioxide can bind to a deoxygenated
hemoglobin molecule but it binds to the amino
acid part of the hemoglobin molecule not the iron
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14Formed Elements Erythrocyte Production
- Blood cell formation is known as hematopoiesis
which occurs in the red bone marrow - On average red bone marrow turns out 100 billion
new blood cells every day - All formed elements arise from the same type of
stem cell the pleuripotent hemocytoblast - However their maturation paths differ and once a
cell is committed to a specific blood cell
pathway it cannot change - This commitment is signaled by the appearance of
membrane surface receptors that respond to
specific hormones or growth factors that push the
cell toward further specialization
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16Hormonal Control of Erythropoiesis
- It is important to have just the right amount of
red blood cells too few leads to tissue hypoxia
(lack oxygen) and too many leads to very viscous
blood - Under normal conditions a small amount of the
hormone erythropoietin circulates through the
blood maintaining red cell production to replace
red blood cell loss - When certain kidney cells become hypoxic they
increase the release of this hormone to increase
blood cell production - Factors that may cause this to happen are
- Reduced number of red blood cells due to
hemorrahage - Insufficient hemoglobin per RBC (maybe iron
deficiency) - Reduced availability of oxygen such as in high
altitudes or during pneumonia
17Erythrocyte Disorders
- Most erythrocyte disorders can be classified as
anemias (abnormally low oxygen carrying capacity)
or polycythemias(abnormally high erythrocyte
numbers) - Common causes of anemias are
- Insufficient number of red blood cells example
would be a result of hemorrhage - Low hemoglobin content such as those with iron
deficiencies - Production of abnormal hemoglobin. An example is
sickle cell anemia which is the result of a
change in one of the 287 amino acids that make up
hemoglobin which cause it to change shape under
low oxygen conditions making the red blood cells
stiff and likely to rupture
18Leukocytes (White Blood Cells)
- Only formed elements that are complete cells with
nuclei and organelles. - They account for less than 1 of total blood
volume - On average there are 4800-10,800 WBCs/microliter
of blood - They are crucial to our defense against disease
and unlike red blood cells, they are not confined
to our blood stream - They are grouped into two major categories the
granulocytes and agranulocytes
19Granulocytes
- These are roughly spherical in shape and are
larger and much shorter lived then erythrocytes - Functionally all granulocytes are phagocytes to a
greater or lesser degree - The types of granulocytes are
- Neutrophils-the most numerous leukocyte they
account for 50-70 of leukocyte population they
are active phagocytes especially against bacteria - Eosinophils- they account for 2-4 of leukocyte
population they lead the fight against parasitic
worms - Basophils-these are the rarest leukocyte and
account for only 0.5-1 of population they
release histamine which acts as a vasodilator and
attract other white blood cells to an area
20Agranulocytes
- The two types of agranulocytes are as follows
- Lymphocytes-these account for 25 of the
leukocyte population these play a crucial part
in immunity against things like viruses and give
rise to plasma cells that produce antibodies - Monocytes-these account for 3-8 of leukocyte
population they are very active macrophages and
are crucial in defense against viruses, certain
intracellular bacteria parasites, and chronic
infections
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23Platelets
- Platelets are cytoplasmic fragments of
extraordinarily large cells called megakaryocytes - Platelets are essential to blood clotting process
when blood vessels are damaged - They stick to the damaged site and form a
temporary plug that helps seal the break
24Hemostasis
- Hemostasis is the steps involved to stop bleeding
when a blood vessel breaks - The hemostasis response is fast, localized, and
carefully controlled - Three rapid steps occur during hemostasis
- Vascular spasms- chemicals released by damaged
epithelial cells cause blood vessels to become
constricted to reduce blood loss - Platelet plug formation- platelets begin to
adhere to exposed collagen fibers and in turn the
platelets release chemicals that attract more
platelets together - Coagulation-blood is transformed from a liquid
into a gel when signaled by chemicals in the blood
25Disorders of Hemostasis
- Thromboembolic conditions include disorders that
cause undesirable clot formation - Thrombus- a clot that develops and persists in an
unbroken blood vessel - Embolus- a blood clot that floats freely in the
blood stream - Embolism- a blood clot that passes through a
blood vessel that is too narrow for it to pass
and eventually blocks that blood vessel - Hemophilia refers to a genetic condition where
the body lacks the ability to create many of the
clot causing chemicals so blood does not clot
easily
26Blood Types
- Humans have different blood types
- These blood types are the result of very specific
glycoproteins (antigens) on the external surface
of an individuals red blood cells - If a persons body recognizes a red blood cell as
foreign it will cause agglutination to occur
(clumping together of foreign cells) - This occurs when a foreign antigen is present in
a persons body - The presence or lack of presence has allowed
people to be classified into several different
blood type groups - ABO groups
- Rh blood group
27Blood Types by Population
Caucasians African American Hispanic Asian
O 37 47 53 39
O - 8 4 4 1
A 33 24 29 27
A - 7 2 2 0.5
B 9 18 9 25
B - 2 1 1 0.4
AB 3 4 2 7
AB - 1 0.3 0.2 0.1
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29Cardiovascular System
30Size, Location, and Orientation
- The Heart is basically the pump that moves blood
throughout the body to transport important body
chemicals and help remove wastes - 2/3 of the heart is located to the left of the
midsternal line and the balance projects to the
left - It is roughly the size of the fist and has a mass
between 250-350 grams (less than a pound) - The bottom apex points inferiorly toward your
left hip while its broad flat base points toward
your right shoulder
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32Coverings and Layers of the Heart
- The heart is enclosed in a double walled sac
called the pericardium - The heart wall is composed of three layers.
These include - The superficial epicardium that is often
infiltrated with fat - The middle layer called the myocardium that is
composed mainly of cardiac muscle arranged in
circular or spiral bundles - The inner layer is known as the endocardium
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34Chambers and Greater Vessels of the Heart
- The heart contains four chambers-two superior
atria (right and left atrium) and two inferior
ventricles (right and left ventricle) - The internal partition that separates the two is
called the interatrial septum and
interventricular septum - Functionally the atria are receiving chambers for
blood returning from circulation and because they
only push blood into the inferior ventricles they
are relatively small, thin walled chambers that
contribute little to the propulsive pumping
action of the heart
35Chambers and Greater Vessels of the Heart
- The right atrium receives blood from three veins
- Superior vena cava returning blood from regions
superior to the diaphragm - Inferior vena cava returning blood from regions
inferior to the diaphragm - Coronary sinus which collects blood draining from
the myocardium - The left atrium receives blood from four
pulmonary veins bringing blood from the lungs to
the heart - The ventricles make up most of the volume of the
heart - They are the discharging chambers or actual pumps
of the heart as they pump blood to the lungs and
to the rest of the body - The right ventricle pumps blood into the
pulmonary trunk to be sent to the lungs to
undergo gas exchange while the left ventricle
pumps blood through the aorta to the body
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39Pathway of Blood Through the Heart
- The heart is a two pump system operating side by
side each serving a separate blood circuit - The blood vessels that carry blood to and from
the lungs form the pulmonary circuit - The blood vessels that carry functional blood to
and from all body tissues constitute the systemic
circuit - The right side of the heart is the pulmonary
circuit pump - The left side of the heart is the systemic
circuit
40Pathway of Blood Through the Heart
- Blood returning from the body tissues low in
oxygen and rich in carbon dioxide is received
into the right atrium where it moves to the right
ventricle - The right ventricle pumps the blood through the
pulmonary trunk to the lungs for gas exchange - The oxygenated blood then travels from the lungs
to the left atrium through the pulmonary veins - The left ventricle then pumps the blood to the
tissue of the body - Although equal volumes of blood is pumped through
the pulmonary and systemic circuit at any moment
the left ventricle must pump blood to the entire
body where as the right side is only pumping the
blood to the lungs. The left ventricle works
much harder in doing so and therefore has a much
thicker wall
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42Coronary Circulation
- Coronary Circulation is the functional blood
supply of the heart and is the shortest
circulation in the body - The arterial supply of the coronary circulation
is the right and left coronary arteries - These arteries provide an intermittent pulsating
blood flow to the myocardium. They deliver blood
when the heart is relaxed but are relatively
ineffective during ventricular contractions - Although the heart is about 1/200th of the bodys
weight it requires about 1/20th the bodys blood
supply - After passing through the capillary beds in the
myocardium the blood empties into the cardiac
veins and runs toward the coronary sinus where
blood empties into the right atrium
43Coronary Circulation Disorders
- Prolonged blockage of the coronary arteries can
lead to a lack of oxygen delivery to the
myocardium - This can cause an event known as myocardial
infarction (heart attack) - Adult cardiac muscle is essential amitotic (do
not divide) most areas of cell death lead to be
repaired with noncontractile scar tissue
44Heart Valves
- Blood flows through the heart in one direction
from atria to ventricles and out the great
arteries leaving the superior aspect of the
heart. This is accomplished by four valves - There are two atrioventricular valves that
prevent backflow into the atria when the
ventricles contract - The right atrioventricular valve is composed of
three flexible cusps so it is called the
triscupid valve - The left atrioventricular valve is composed of
two flaps so it is called the biscupid valve aka
(mitral valve) - Attached to each atrioventricular valve is tiny
white collagen chords called chordae tendinae - When the heart relaxes the atrioventricular
valves are relaxed and remain open. When the
ventricles contract intraventricular pressure
rises causing the atrioventricular valves to close
45Heart Valves
- The semilunar valves (aortic and pulmonary) guard
the bases of the large arteries issuing from the
ventricles to prevent backflow into the
associated valves - When the ventricles contract, intraventricular
pressure increases cause the valves to be forced
open. They close when the pressure drops. - When valves do not close or open properly the
heart can still function but must work much
harder due to the backflow or constriction of
blood flow causing the heart to be weakened
46Heart Animations
- http//bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp49
/49020.html - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vy5maHDAkzUs
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vM8HYmaDpWpE