Title: Circulation and Gas Exchange
1Circulation and Gas Exchange
2Invertebrate Open Circulatory System
- Arthropods and mollusks
- Blood and interstitial fluid are the same
(hemolymph) - Tubular heart pumps hemolymph through a dorsal
vessel out into sinuses - Hemolymph bathes cells and allows for exchange of
nutrients - When heart relaxes, hemolymph flows back into
vessels through ostia - Body movements squeeze sinuses to aid circulation
3Invertebrate Closed Circulatory System
- Annelids (earthworms) have closed circulatory
system - 5 Aortic arches or hearts force blood down to
the ventral vessel, which carries blood to
posterior and up to complete the circuit - Blood carries O2 and CO2 between cells and the
skin where gas exchange takes place - Blood also circulates nutrients from digestive
tract to the rest of the body
4Vertebrate Circulatory System
- Closed system with a chambered heart that pumps
blood through arteries that lead away from the
heart to capillaries. - Capillariessmall vessels in tissues where
exchange of materials take place - Blood is carried back to heart through veins
5Fish
- 2 chamber heart
- One artrium
- One ventricle
- Blood from ventricle picks up O2 in gills, then
is collected into a large artery to pass directly
to the rest of the body before returning to the
atrium
6Amphibian
- 3 chamber heart
- Two artria
- One ventricle
- Ventricle pumps blood to both the lungs and the
rest of the body simultaneously through 2
different major arteries - Allows oxygenated blood from lungs and
deoxygenated blood from the body to mix in the
ventricle before it is delivered back to the body - Allows higher arterial pressure in blood pumped
to vessels
7Birds and Mammals
- 4 chamber heart
- Two artria
- Two ventricle
- Higher metabolic need met by division of heart
into 2 pumps - Right atrium and ventricle pumps deoxygenated
blood to lungs through pulmonary circulation - Left atrium and ventricle pumps oxygenated blood
to the rest of the body through systemic
circulation - Avoids mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated
blood - Allows high arterial pressure required for quick
delivery
8Human Heart
- Located beneath the sternum
- About the size of your fist
- Composed mostly of cardiac muscle tissue
- 2 atria have thin walls and function as
collection chambers for returning blood - 2 ventricles have thick, powerful walls that pump
blood to the organs
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10Four valves function to prevent backflow of blood
- Atrioventricular valves
- Prevent backflow when ventricles contract
- Semilunar valves
- Prevent backflow when ventricles relax
11Cardiac Cycle
- Systoleheart muscles contract and the chambers
pump blood - Diastoleheart muscles relax and fills with blood
- Cardiac outputvolume of blood per minute that
the left ventricle pumps into the systemic
circuit
12Control of Heart Rhythm
- Sinoatrial (SA) nodecells are self-excitablegene
rate electrical impulses - Cardiac muscle cells are electrically coupled by
intercalated discs b/w cells
13Control of Heart Rhythm
- Atrioventricular (AV) nodereceives signal from
atria, delays 0.1 sec, and then sends signal
throughout walls of ventricle via the bundle
branches and Purkinje fibers
14Blood Vessels
- Arteriescarry blood away from the heart to the
tissues - Branch into smaller arterioles, which supply
blood to tissues via capillaries - Thick-walled, muscular (smooth muscle), and
elastic, transporting blood at high pressure - Blood is oxygenated, except the pulmonary artery
that carries deoxygenated blood from tissues to
lungs through the right atrium and ventricle
15- Veinscarry blood to the heart from the
capillaries - Capillaries branch into larger venules, which
supply blood to veins and back to the heart - Thin-walled, little smooth muscle, transporting
blood at low pressure, and contain many valves to
prevent backflow - Veins have no pulse and carry deoxygenated blood,
except the pulmonary vein which carries
oxygenated blood from the lungs - Skeletal muscle contraction aids in systemic
circulation
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17- Capillariesthin-walled vessels (simple squamous)
- Permit exchange of materials between blood and
body cells - Controlled by precapillary sphincters
18- Capillaries
- Fluid containing water with nutrients and
hormones seep from capillaries into tissues,
driven by pressure - Cells and proteins are retained in the
capillaries and draw water back into the
capillaries by osmosis - Excess fluid in tissue can enter lymphatic system
to be filtered and cycled back to the circulatory
system
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20Capillary Exchange
21Regulation of Blood Flow
- Regulated to match the metabolic needs
- Smooth muscle in walls of arterioles constrict to
reduce blood flow to capillaries - Smooth muscle relaxes when blood leaving
capillaries is low in O2, allowing more blood to
flow through capillary bed
22Regulation of Blood Flow
- Secretion of epinephrine by adrenal glands ?
heart rate and constricts arteries to ? arterial
pressure - Angiotensin secreted from the kidney acts on
smooth muscle in the arterioles and arteries to
cause constriction and ? arterial pressure - Vasopressin secreted by posterior pituitary in
response to stretch sensors causes constriction
in arterioles and arteries to ? arterial pressure
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24Erythrocytes Red Blood Cells
- Primary function to carry oxygen
- Production in red bone marrow of bones stimulated
by erythropoietin (produced by kidneys) - Mature cells lack nuclei and circulate 4mos.
- Mature cells lack mitochondriaproduce ATP
without oxygen through glycolysis - Contain hemoglobin-pigment that binds oxygen
25Erythrocytes Red Blood Cells
- Red blood cells (rbc) manufacture 2 antigens,
antigen A (Blood Type A) and antigen B (Blood
Type B) - Plasma carries antibodies for the antigens that
are not present on the rbcs
26Leukocytes White Blood Cells
- Involved in immune functions in the body
- Phagocytesengulf bacteria
- Neutrophils1st to arrive at site of inflammation
- Macrophages and Monocytes
- Lymphocytes (B and T cells)immune response
- B cells produce antibodies
- Helper T cells kill infected cells
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28Leukocytes White Blood Cells
- Plateletscell fragments produced in marrow
- Involved in blood clotting mechanism
- Activation of protease thrombin cleaves
fibrinogen protein in the blood to make fibrin
that polymerizes to for a net across the wound,
trapping more cells and blocking the flow of blood
29Cardiovascular Disease
- Heart attackdeath of cardiac muscle tissue
resulting from artery blockage of one or more
coronary arteries which supply oxygen to the
heart - Strokedeath of nervous tissue in the brain
resulting from artery blockage in the head
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31Cardiovascular Disease
- Atherosclerosisplaques develop on inner walls of
arteries - Forms where smooth muscle thickens abnormally and
is infiltrated by fibrous connective tissue - Arteriosclerosishardening of the arteries by
calcium deposits - Hypertensionhigh blood pressure
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33Cardiovascular Disease
- Hypertension and atherosclerosis have genetic
component and environmental component (smoking,
lack of exercise, high fat and cholesterol diet) - Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs)add deposits of
cholesterol in arterial plaques - High-density lipoproteins (HDLs)may reduce
cholesterol deposition - Exercise increases HDL concentration
- Smoking increases LDL concentration
34Gas Exchange
- Involves both Respiratory system and Circulatory
system
35Invertebrate Gas Exchange
- Water contains less oxygen than air
- As an adaptation, most aquatic animals have gills
- Total surface area of gills is often larger than
that of the rest of the body
36Invertebrate Gas Exchange
- Arthropods respiratory system consists of a
series of respiratory tubules, tracheae - Open to the outside in the form of pairs of
orifices called spiracles - Tracheae subdivide into smaller and smaller
branches, to make close contact with most cells - Direct diffusion through tracheae is one factor
that limits body size in arthropods
37Fish
38Countercurrent Exchange
- Maximizes exchange of gases between blood inside
the gills and the water flowing over the gills - Blood flows through capillaries in direction
opposite of water flowing across gills
39Amphibians
- Simple air sac with little surface area
- Must supplement gas exchange in lungs with
exchange across the thin moist skin
http//www.answersingenesis.org/home/area/magazine
s/images/v22frogR.jpg
40Avian Respiration
- Air sacs permit a unidirectional flow of air
through the lungs - Unidirectional flow means that air moving through
bird lungs is largely 'fresh' air has a higher
oxygen content
http//numbat.murdoch.edu.au/Anatomy/avian/fig3.2.
GIF
http//people.eku.edu/ritchisong/RITCHISO/birdresp
iration.html
41Air Flow through Avian System
- On first inhalation, air flows through the
trachea bronchi primarily into the posterior
(rear) air sacs - On exhalation, air moves from the posterior air
sacs into the lungs - With the second inhalation, air moves from the
lungs into the anterior (front) air sacs - With the second exhalation, air moves from the
anterior air sacs back into the trachea out - Air flow is driven by changes in pressure within
the respiratory system - So, it takes two respiratory cycles to move one
'packet' of air completely through the avian
respiratory system
http//people.eku.edu/ritchisong/RITCHISO/birdresp
iration.html
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46Ventilating Lungs Breathing
47Automatic Control of Breathing
- Breathing control center in brain medulla
oblongata and pons - Monitors CO2 levels in blood by changes in pH
- CO2 H2O ? Carbonic acid
- ? pH ? depth and rate of breathing
- ?altitude ? O2 levels
- Sensors in aorta and carotid arteries detect and
signal control center to ? breathing rate
48Loading and Unloading of Respiratory Gases
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50Oxygen Transport
- Oxygen carried by respiratory pigments
- Invertebrates utilize hemocyaninCu is the
oxygen-binding component - Vertebrates utilize hemoglobinfour heme groups
surrounding an Fe atom - Can carry four oxygen atoms
51Oxygen Dissociation Curves for Hemoglobin
Bohr Shift Active tissue releases CO2 CO2
reacts with H2O to form carbonic acid This ? pH
which induces hemoglobin to release more O2
52Carbon Dioxide Transport
- Hemoglobin transports CO2 and assists with
buffering the bloodprevents dramatic changes in
pH - 7 CO2 released by cells transported as dissolved
CO2 - 23 binds to amino group of hemoglobin
- 70 transported in form of bicarbonate ions in
red blood cells
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