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OBJECTIVES Circulation in Animals

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Title: OBJECTIVES Circulation in Animals


1
OBJECTIVES   -Circulation in Animals
  • Describe the need for circulatory and respiratory
    systems due to increasing animal body size
  • Distinguish between open and closed circulatory
    systems. List the three basic components common
    to both systems.
  • List the structural components of a vertebrate
    circulatory system and relate their structure to
    their functions
  • Describe the general relationship between
    metabolic rates and the structure of the
    vertebrate circulatory system
  • Using diagrams, compare and contrast the
    circulatory systems of fish, amphibians, non-bird
    reptiles, and mammals or birds
  • Distinguish between pulmonary and systemic
    circuits and explain the functions of each
  • Explain the advantage of double circulation over
    a single circuit

2
  • Define a cardiac cycle, distinguish between
    systole and diastole, and explain what causes the
    first and second heart sounds.
  • Define cardiac output and describe two factors
    that influence it.
  • List the four heart valves, describe their
    location, and explain their functions.
  • Define heart murmur and explain its cause.
  • Define sinoatrial (SA) node and describe its
    location in the heart
  • Distinguish between a myogenic heart and a
    neurogenic heart
  • Describe the origin and pathway of the action
    potential (cardiac impulse) in the normal human
    heart.
  • Explain how the pace of the SA node can be
    modulated by nerves, hormones, body temperature,
    and exercise.
  • Define blood pressure and describe how it is
    measured.
  • Explain how peripheral resistance and cardiac
    output affect blood pressure

3
  • Relate the structures of capillaries, arteries,
    and veins to their functions.
  • Explain why blood flow through capillaries is
    substantially slower than it is through arteries
    and veins.
  • Explain how blood returns to the heart even
    though it must sometimes travel from the lower
    extremities against gravity.
  • Explain how blood flow through capillary beds is
    regulated.
  • Explain how osmotic pressure and hydrostatic
    pressure regulate the exchange of fluid and
    solutes across capillaries.
  • Describe the composition of lymph and explain how
    the lymphatic system helps the normal functioning
    of the circulatory system. Explain the role of
    lymph nodes in body defense.
  • Describe the composition and functions of plasma.
  • Relate the structure of erythrocytes to their
    function.
  • List the five main types of white blood cells and
    characterize their functions.
  • Describe the structure of platelets.
  • Outline the formation of erythrocytes from their
    origin from stem cells in the red marrow of bones
    to their destruction by phagocytic cells.
  • Describe the hormonal control of erythrocyte
    production.
  • Outline the sequence of events that occurs during
    blood clotting and explain what prevents
    spontaneous clotting in the absence of injury.
  • Distinguish between a heart attack and a stroke.
  • Distinguish between low-density lipoproteins
    (LDLs) and high-density lipoproteins (HDLs).
  • List the factors that have been correlated with
    an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.   

4
Gas Exchange in Animals
  • Define gas exchange and distinguish between a
    respiratory medium and a respiratory surface
  • Describe the general requirements for a
    respiratory surface and list a variety of
    respiratory organs that meet these requirements.
  • Describe respiratory adaptations of aquatic
    animals.
  • Describe the advantages and disadvantages of
    water as a respiratory medium.
  • Describe countercurrent exchange and explain why
    it is more efficient than the concurrent flow of
    water and blood.
  • Describe the advantages and disadvantages of air
    as a respiratory medium and explain how insect
    tracheal systems are adapted for efficient gas
    exchange in a terrestrial environment.
  • For the human respiratory system, describe the
    movement of air through air passageways to the
    alveolus, listing the structures that air must
    pass through on its journey.
  • Compare positive and negative pressure breathing.
    Explain how respiratory movements in humans
    ventilate the lungs.
  • Distinguish between tidal volume, vital capacity,
    and residual volume.
  • Explain how the respiratory systems of birds and
    mammals differ.
  • Explain how breathing is controlled in humans.
  • Define partial pressure and explain how it
    influences diffusion across respiratory surfaces.
  • Describe the adaptive advantage of respiratory
    pigments in circulatory systems. Distinguish
    between hemocyanin and hemoglobin as respiratory
    pigments.
  • Draw the Hb-oxygen dissociation curve, explain
    the significance of its shape, and explain how
    the affinity of hemoglobin for oxygen changes
    with oxygen concentration.
  • Describe how carbon dioxide is picked up at the
    tissues and deposited in the lungs.
  • Describe the respiratory adaptations of the
    pronghorn that give it great speed and endurance.
  • Describe respiratory adaptations of diving
    mammals and the role of myoglobin.

5
CHAPTER 42CIRCULATION AND GAS EXCHANGE
6
TRANSPORT SYSTEMS
  • Circulatory Systems Reduce Distances Substances
    Must Diffuse diffusion too slow for most animals

7
Circulatory Systems Connect Aqueous Environment
of Cell with Organs Specialized for Exchange
  • Oxygen diffuses from air in lungs across
    epithelium, into blood
  • Oxygenated blood transported to all body parts
  • Oxygen diffuses from blood and through plasma
    membrane
  • Carbon dioxide moves in opposite direction

8
Circulatory Systems Maintain Homeostasis
  • Blood passes through liver and kidneys which
    regulate nutrient and waste content

9
INVERTEBRATES
  • Gastrovascular Cavities
  • Cnidarians do not require specialized internal
    transport body wall 2 cells thick
  • Water inside gastrovascular cavity is continuous
    with surrounding water
  • Cavity functions both in digestion and
    distribution of nutrients
  • Nutrients have a short distance to diffuse to
    outer cell layer

10
Open and Closed Circulatory Systems
  • Open circulatory system (arthropods, mollusks)
    hemolymph bathes internal organs in sinuses (Fig
    38.2a 4th ed)
  • Hemolymph blood and interstitial fluid
  • Circulation contractions of heart and body
    movements
  • Relaxation blood enters through ostia
  • Chemical exchange btw. hemolymph and cells in
    sinuses

11
Closed circulatory system (annelids, squids,
octopuses, vertebrates) blood confined to
vessels and distinct interstitial fluid present
  • Heart pumps blood into large vessels
  • Major vessels branch into smaller vessels which
    supply organs (Fig 38.2b)
  • Blood exchanges materials with interstitial fluid

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13
VERTEBRATES
  • Cardiovascular System heart, blood vessels,
    blood
  • Heart ? arteries ? arterioles ? capillaries ?
    venules ? veins ? heart

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15
Fish 2 chambered heart, 1 atrium, 1 ventricle
  • Ventricle ? gill capillaries (gas exchange) ?
    arteries ? organ capillary beds ? veins ? atrium
    ? atrium ? ventricle
  • Blood flow through two capillary beds drops blood
    pressure
  • Blood flow aided by swimming

16
Amphibians 3 chambered heart, 2 atria, 1
ventricle
  • Double Circulation pulmonary, systemic
  • Ventricle ? lungs/skin (gas exchange) ? left
    atrium ? ventricle ? all other organs ? right
    atrium
  • Increased blood pressure for system circulation
  • Some mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood
    ridge in ventricle diverts mostly oxygenated
    blood to systemic circulation

17
Reptiles (excluding crocodilians) 3 chambered
hearts with partially divided ventricle
  • Reduces mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated
    blood

18
Birds, Mammals, Crocodilians 4 chambered heart
with 2 atria and 2 ventricles
  • Prevents mixing of blood
  • Increased oxygen delivery efficiency

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20
THE RHYTHMIC PUMP
  • The Heart Form and Function

21
Human Heart
  • Located beneath sternum
  • Cone-shaped, fist sized
  • Surrounded by sac with a 2-layered wall
  • Mostly muscle tissue
  • Atria thin-walled collection chambers
  • Ventricles thick-walled, powerful pumps

22
Heart chambers alternatively contract and relax
in rhythmic cycle
  • Cardiac cycle
  • Systole contraction, pump
  • Diastole relaxation, fill

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24
Valves prevent backflow
  • Connective tissue
  • Atrioventricular atrium/ventricle
  • Semilunar valves ventricles/arteries
  • Heart murmur

25
Heart Rate number of beats per minute
  • Pulse
  • Average resting rate 60 beats/minute
  • Inverse relationship between animal body size and
    pulse

26
Cardiac output volume per minute
  • Stroke volume volume per pump

27
Control of Heart Myogenic (self-excitable)
tempo controlled by sinoatrial (SA) node
  • Right atrium
  • Specialized muscle with characteristics of muscle
    and nerve tissue
  • Atria contract in unison
  • Excitation causes atrioventricular (AV) node to
    contract
  • Electrocardiogram (EKG) detects electrical
    currents
  • Rate influenced by antagonistic nerves, hormones,
    temperature, exercise

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29
Blood Vessel Structure
  • Arteries/veins have 3 layers outer elastic
    connective, middle smooth muscle, inner
    epithelium (simple squamous epithelium)
  • Middle/outer layers thicker in arteries than in
    veins
  • Capillaries only endothelium

30
More blood flows through large vessels than in
small vessels due to total smaller diameter in
large vessels
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32
Blood Pressure Hydrostatic force blood exerts
against vessel wall
  • Pressure greatest in arteries during systole
  • Peripheral resistance (arterioles)
  • Determined by cardiac output and peripheral
    resistance
  • Stress constricts
  • Veins pressure near zero skeletal muscles,
    breathing, valves

33
Blood Pressure and Flow through the arteries,
capillaries, to veins
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35
Blood Flow Through Capillary Beds
  • 5-10 of capillaries carry oxygen at one time
  • Full load in brain, heart, kidneys, liver
  • Distribution controlled by nerves hormones
  • Arteriole contraction/relaxation
  • Precapillary sphincters
  • Diversion
  • To digestive tract after meal
  • To skeletal muscle - exercise

36
Capillary Exchange
  • Exchange between blood and interstitial fluid
  • Diffusion, endo/exocytosis, bulk flow
  • Fluid leaves near arteriole and 85 reenters near
    venule
  • 15 returned through lymphatic system

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38
Lymphatic System
  • Lymph similar to interstitial fluid
  • Lymph diffuses into lymph capillaries
  • Valves and contractions
  • Lymph nodes swellings along system that filter
    lymph and attack viruses and bacteria
  • Lymph capillaries absorb fats from villi

39
BLOOD CONNECTIVE TISSUE CELLS AND PLASMA
  • Plasma 45 of Blood, 90 water
  • Electrolytes dissolved ions osmotic balance,
    buffer
  • Proteins escort lipids, immunoglobulins,
    clotting factors
  • Serum clotting factors removed
  • Contains nutrients, metabolic wastes, respiratory
    gases, hormones

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41
Cellular Elements
  • Erythrocytes Red Blood Cells biconcave discs
  • Most numerous of cells
  • Lack nuclei, anaerobic respiration
  • Contains hemoglobin, reversible bind oxygen to
    iron
  • Erythropoietin from kidneys

42
  • Leukocytes White Blood Cells defense and
    immunity
  • Basophils, eosinophils, neutrophils, lymphocytes,
    monocytes
  • Interstitial fluid, lymph nodes
  • Platelets cellular fragments, blood clotting

43
Cell types in a blood smear
Platelets
Eosinophils
Neutrophils
Monocytes
Lymphocytes
Basophils
44
  • Multipotent stem cells give rise to all blood
    cells in bone marrow (ribs, vertebrae,
    breastbone, pelvis)

45
  • Blood Clotting Platelets clump, release
    clotting factors, fibrinogen ? fibrin

46
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES
  • Leading Cause of Death in the United States
  • Heart Attack death of cardiac muscle resulting
    from blockage of coronary arteries
  • Stroke death of nervous tissue in brain
    resulting from blockage of arteries in brain
  • Thrombus blood clot that blocks a vessel
  • Embolus moving clot

47
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASES Cont.
  • Atherosclerosis plaques develop on inner walls
    of arteries and narrow vessels. Decrease blood
    flow, increase risk of clot formation
  • Arteriosclerosis calcium deposits
  • Angina pectoris chest pains, insufficient
    oxygen
  • Hypertension high blood pressure, promotes
    atherosclerosis
  • Smoking, diet, LDLs (Low Density Lipoprotein),
    HDL (High Density Lipoprotein)

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49
GAS EXCHANGE
  • Movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide between
    animal and the environment
  • Respiratory Medium Source of oxygen air or
    water

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52
Respiratory Surface Where exchange occurs
  • Moist gases dissolved in water
  • Large
  • Protozoa Entire surface area
  • Sponges, cnidarians, flatworms each body cell
    in contact with outside environment
  • Earthworms, some amphibians use moist skin
  • Specialized organs

53
GILLS
  • Vary in shape and location among organisms
  • Ventilation Any method of increasing flow of
    respiratory medium over respiratory surface
  • Water has low oxygen content much energy spent
    on ventilation
  • Countercurrent exchange blood flows opposite to
    direction in which water passes maintains
    concentration gradient

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TRACHEAE INSECTS
  • Advantages of air over water
  • High oxygen content
  • Gases diffuse faster in air
  • Ventilation less important
  • Air desiccation problem solved through internal
    respiratory surfaces

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Trachea tiny air tubes in insect body
  • Spiracles
  • Contact with almost all cells
  • Diffusion or ventilation
  • Circulatory systems dont transport gases

59
LUNGS
  • Form and Function of Mammalian Respiratory
    Systems
  • Thoracic cavity 2-layered sac
  • Nostrils warm, moisten, filter
  • Pharynx, glottis, larynx, trachea, bronchi,
    bronchioles, alveoli
  • Oxygen dissolves in moist film covering
    epithelium and diffuses to capillaries carbon
    dioxide moves in opposite direction

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Ventilation Breathing
  • Frogs positive pressure breathing
  • Mammals negative pressure breathing
  • Diaphragm, ribs
  • Contract, expand
  • Relax, compress
  • Tidal volume normal breath volume
  • Vital capacity maximum air volume
  • Residual volume amount that remains in lungs
  • Birds air sacs in abdomen, neck
  • Air sacs do not exchange gases bellows
  • Parabronchi tiny channels one direction

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  • Control of Breathing
  • Medulla oblongata, pons negative feedback,
    sense carbon dioxide levels

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  • Loading/Unloading Oxygen
  • Gases diffuse from higher partial pressure to
    lower partial pressure

67
Respiratory Pigments and Oxygen Transport
  • Hemocyanin (arthropods, mollusks) blue due to
    copper, not confined to cells
  • Hemoglobin vertebrates
  • 4 subunits heme group, Fe
  • Cooperativity (Fig 38.26)
  • Bohr shift (Fig 38.26b)

68
Carbon Dioxide Transport
  • Transported in three forms
  • Dissolved carbon dioxide in plasma (7)
  • Bound to amino groups of hemoglobin (23)
  • As bicarbonate ions in blood (70)
  • Formation of bicarbonate produces H ions and
    attach to hemoglobin and results in only slight
    pH change

69
Adaptations of Diving Mammals
  • Store large amounts of oxygen in blood
  • Higher myoglobin concentration in muscles
  • Higher blood volume
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