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Circulatory System

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... flow in the arteries to the heart muscle leads to symptoms such as chest pain. ... This treatment may be repeated at each blocked site in the coronary arteries. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Circulatory System


1
Circulatory System

2
Circulatory System
  • Major Role The main role of the circulatory
    system is to transport nutrients, gases (such as
    oxygen and CO2), hormones and wastes through the
    body.  
  • Major Organs Heart, blood vessels and blood.

3
Anatomy of the Circulatory System
  • The Main Features
  • Two pumps (in a single heart)
  • one to pump deoxygenated blood to the lungs
  • the other to pump oxygenated blood to all the
    other organs and tissues of the body.
  • A system of blood vessels to distribute blood
    throughout the body
  • Specialized organs for exchange of materials
    between the blood and the external environment
    for example
  • organs like the lungs and intestine that add
    materials to the blood and
  • organs like the lungs and kidneys that remove
    materials from the blood and deposit them back in
    the external environment.

4
Circulatory System
  • Red blood cells carry oxygen from the lungs to
    all the cells of the body.
  • White blood cells are like soldiers protecting
    the body.
  • ARTERIES are vessels that carry blood away from
    the heart.
  • VEINS are vessels that carry blood back to the
    heart.
  • Blood CIRCULATES--circles--all around your body
    in about one or two minutes. 5 liters
  • Inside the heart are four hollow chambers. Each
    chamber is a little pump. The pumping pushes
    blood all around your body.

5
Circulatory System
  • It's small, a little larger than a clenched fist.
    Relatively simple in function, your heart's
    primary purpose is to pump...24 hours a day, 70
    to 80 times a minute. With each beat, the heart
    pumps blood that delivers life-sustaining oxygen
    and nutrients to 300 trillion cells. Each day the
    average heart "beats" (or expands and contracts)
    100,000 times and pumps about 2,000 gallons of
    blood. In a 70-year lifetime, an average human
    heart beats more than 2.5 billion times, pumping
    approximately 55 million gallons of blood.

6
Anatomy of the Circulatory System
  • The Coronary System
  • From the left atrium,
  • Blood flows through the mitral valve (also known
    as the bicuspid valve) into the left ventricle.
  • Contraction of the ventricle closes the mitral
    valve and opens the aortic valve at the entrance
    to the aorta.
  • The first branches from the aorta occur just
    beyond the aortic valve still within the heart.
  • Two openings lead to the right and left coronary
    arteries, which supply blood to the heart itself.
    Although the coronary arteries arise within the
    heart, they pass directly out to the surface of
    the heart and extend down across it. They supply
    blood to the network of capillaries that
    penetrate every portion of the heart.
  • The capillaries drain into two coronary veins
    that empty into the right atrium.

7
Anatomy of the Circulatory System
  • Deoxygenated blood from the body enters the right
    atrium.
  • It flows through the tricuspid valve into the
    right ventricle. The term tricuspid refers to the
    three flaps of tissue that make up the valve.
  • Contraction of the ventricle then closes the
    tricuspid valve and forces open the pulmonary
    valve.

8
Anatomy of the Circulatory System
  • Blood flows into the pulmonary artery.
  • This branches immediately, carrying blood to the
    right and left lungs.
  • Here the blood gives up carbon dioxide and takes
    on a fresh supply of oxygen.
  • The capillary beds of the lungs are drained by
    venules that are the tributaries of the pulmonary
    veins.
  • Four pulmonary veins, two draining each lung,
    carry oxygenated blood to the left atrium of the
    heart

9
How The Heart Beats
  • Have you ever wondered what makes your heart
    beat? How does it do it automatically, every
    second of every minute of every hour of every
    day?
  • The answer lies in a special group of cells that
    have the ability to generate electrical activity
    on their own.

10
How The Heart Beats
  • The natural pacemaker of the heart is called the
    sinoatrial node (SA node). It is located in the
    right atrium.
  • The electrical impulse leaves the SA node and
    travels to the right and left atria, causing them
    to contract together. This takes seconds.

11
How The Heart Beats
  • There is now a natural delay to allow the atria
    to contract and the ventricles to fill up with
    blood.
  • The electrical impulse has now traveled to the
    atrioventricular node (AV node)

12
How The Heart Beats
  • The electrical impulse now goes to the Bundle of
    His (3), then it divides into the right and left
    bundle branches (4) where it rapidly spreads
    using Purkinje fibers (5) to the muscles of the
    right and left ventricle, causing them to
    contract at the same time.

13
EKG
  • All this activity produces electrical waves we
    can measure. The measurement is typically
    represented as a graph called an
    electrocardiogram (EKG).
  • Each part of the tracing has a lettered name
  • P wave - coincides with the spread of electrical
    activity over the atria and the beginning of its
    contraction.
  • QRS complex - coincides with the spread of
    electrical activity over the ventricles and the
    beginning of its contraction.
  • T wave - coincides with the recovery phase of the
    ventricles.

14
Circulatory System Disease
  • The single major cause of artery disease is the
    thickening and hardening of arterial walls by
    deposits of fatty materials, known as
    arteriosclerosis.

15
Circulatory System Disease
  • Arteriosclerosis
  • The coronary arteries arise at the point of
    maximum blood pressure in the circulatory system.
    Over the course of time, the arterial walls are
    apt to lose elasticity, which limits the amount
    of blood that can surge through them and hence
    limits the supply of oxygen to the heart. This
    condition is known as arteriosclerosis.
  • Atherosclerosis
  • Fatty deposits, called plaque, may accumulate on
    the interior surface of the coronary arteries.
    This is particularly common in people who have
    high levels of cholesterol in their blood. Plaque
    deposits reduce the bore of the coronary arteries
    and thus the amount of blood they can carry.
  • Atherosclerosis (usually along with
    arteriosclerosis) may
  • so limit the blood supply to the heart that
    during times of stress the heart muscle is so
    deprived of oxygen that the pain of angina is
    created.
  • trigger the formation of a clot causing a
    coronary thrombosis. This stops the flow of blood
    through the vessel and the capillary network it
    supplies causing a heart attack. The portion of
    the heart muscle deprived of oxygen dies quickly
    of oxygen starvation. If the area is not too
    large, the undamaged part of the heart can, in
    time, compensate for the damage.
  • Coronary bypass surgery uses segments of leg
    veins to bypass the clogged portions of the
    coronary arteries.

16
Arteriosclerosis
  • Vascular disease, which affects the brain, heart,
    kidneys, other vital organs, and extremities, is
    the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in
    the USA and in most Western countries.
  • There were almost 1 million deaths due to
    vascular disease in the USA in 1994 (twice as
    many as from cancer and 10 times as many as from
    accidents).
  • CAD and ischemic stroke combined are the number
    one killer in industrialized Western countries
    and are of increasing prevalence in the rest of
    the world.
  • The death rate from CAD among white men aged 25
    to 34 is about 1/10,000 at age 55 to 64, it is
    nearly 1/100.
  • The death rate from CAD among white men aged 35
    to 44 is 6.1 times that among age-matched white
    women.

17
Arteriosclerosis
  • Atherosclerosis is a disease of the arteries in
    which fatty material is deposited in the vessel
    wall, resulting in narrowing and eventual
    impairment of blood flow. Severely restricted
    blood flow in the arteries to the heart muscle
    leads to symptoms such as chest pain.
    Atherosclerosis shows no symptoms until a
    complication occurs.

18
Arteriosclerosis
19
Carotid Stenosis
  • Carotid artery stenosis is the narrowing of the
    carotid arteries. These are the main arteries in
    the neck that supply blood to the brain.
  • This is an angiogram of the right carotid artery
    showing a severe narrowing (stenosis) of the
    internal carotid artery just past the carotid
    fork. There is enlargement of the vein or
    ulceration in the area after the stenosis in this
    close-up film. Note the narrowed segment toward
    the bottom of the picture.

20
Angina
  • Angina is chest pain or discomfort that occurs
    when your heart muscle does not get enough blood.
    Angina may feel like pressure or a squeezing pain
    in your chest. The pain may also occur in your
    shoulders, arms, neck, jaw, or back. It may also
    feel like indigestion.
  • Stable angina and Unstable
  • Nitroglycerin is the most commonly used nitrate
    for angina. Nitroglycerin that dissolves under
    your tongue or between your cheeks and gum is
    used to relieve an angina episode. Nitroglycerin
    in the form of pills and skin patches is used to
    prevent attacks of angina. (Nitroglycerin in
    these forms acts too slowly to relieve pain
    during an angina attack.)

21
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
22
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • Fat and cholesterol accumulates on the inside of
    arteries (atherosclerosis). The small arteries of
    the heart muscle (the coronary arteries) can be
    narrowed or blocked by this accumulation. If the
    narrowing is small, percutaneous transluminal
    coronary angioplasty, or PTCA for short, may be
    the course for treatment. PCTA is a minimally
    invasive procedure to open up blocked coronary
    arteries, allowing blood to circulate
    unobstructed to the heart muscle.
  • The indications for PCTA are
  • persistent chest pain (angina)
  • blockage of only one or two coronary arteries

23
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • The patient is awake and pain-free (local
    anesthesia), a catheter is inserted into an
    artery at the top of the leg (the femoral
    artery). The procedure begins with the doctor
    injecting some local anesthesia into the groin
    area and putting a needle into the femoral artery
    (the blood vessel that runs from the heart down
    the leg). Once the needle is inserted, a guide
    wire is placed through the needle, into the blood
    vessel. Following this step, the guide wire is
    left in the blood vessel and the needle is
    removed. A large needle called an introducer is
    then placed over the guide wire and the guide
    wire is removed.

24
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • Next, a diagnostic catheter, which is a long
    narrow tube, is advanced through the introducer
    over a .035"guidewire, into the blood vessel.
    This catheter is then guided to the aorta and the
    guidewire is removed. Once the catheter is placed
    in the opening or ostium of one of the coronary
    arteries, the doctor injects dye and takes a
    series of X-rays (film of the images).

25
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • The first catheter is exchanged out over the
    guidewire for a guiding catheter and the
    guidewire is removed. A smaller guidewire is
    advanced across the blocked section of the
    coronary artery and a balloon -tipped tube is
    positioned so the balloon part of the tube is
    beside the blockage. The balloon is then inflated
    for a few seconds to compress the blockage
    against the artery wall. Then the balloon is
    deflated. The doctor may repeat this a few times,
    each time pumping up the balloon a little more to
    widen the passage for the blood to flow through.
    This treatment may be repeated at each blocked
    site in the coronary arteries.

26
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • A device called a stent may be placed. A stent is
    a latticed, metal scaffold that is placed within
    the coronary artery to keep the vessel open.

27
Coronary artery balloon angioplasty
  • Once the catheter has been positioned at the
    coronary artery origin, contrast media is
    injected and a series of X-rays (film) are taken
    to check for any change in the arteries.
    Following this, the catheter is removed and the
    procedure is completed.

28
Coronary Bypass Surgery
29
Thrombophlebitis
  • Deep venous thrombosis (DVT) affects mainly the
    veins in the lower leg and the thigh. It involves
    the formation of a clot (thrombus) in the larger
    veins of the area.

30
Thrombophlebitis
  • This picture shows a red and swollen thigh and
    leg caused by a blood clot (thrombus) in the deep
    veins in the groin (ileofemoral veins) which
    prevents normal return of blood from the leg to
    the heart.

31
Circulatory System-Alveoli
32
Circulatory System-Alveoli
33
Circulatory System-Alveoli
34
Pulmonary Disease
  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is a
    term used to describe 2 related lung diseases
    chronic bronchitis and emphysema.
  • Chronic bronchitis is inflammation and eventual
    scarring of the bronchi (airway tubes).
  • Emphysema is enlargement and destruction of the
    alveoli (air sacs) within the lungs. Many persons
    with COPD have both of these conditions.
  • Persons with COPD have difficulty breathing
    because they develop smaller air passageways and
    have partially destroyed alveoli. The air
    passageways also become clogged with mucus, a
    slimy substance. Smoking cigarettes is the most
    important risk factor and cause of COPD. About
    80 to 90 of COPD cases are caused by smoking,
    and a smoker is 10 times more likely than a
    nonsmoker to die of COPD.

35
Pulmonary Disease
  • Most of the medications fall into one of three
    groups
  • Bronchodilators (beta agonists anticholinergics
    theophylline)
  • Anti-inflammatories (inhaled corticosteroids
    long-acting beta agonists corticosteroid pills)
  • Quick Relief Medications
  • Long Term Control Medications
  • Antibiotics
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