Title: Transport Systems in Animals
1Transport Systems in Animals Circulatory Systems
2What is the role of the circulatory system?
- Maintain internal homeostasis
- What are some things that would need to be
balanced within the body? - Maintain temperature, O2 conc., blood glucose,
etc. - Deliver and remove nutrients and gases to and
from the body - Maintain cells in a fluid environment that allows
for these exchanges to occur
3To do all of this, the circulatory system must
come into contact with most tissues in the human
body.
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5Which of the organisms below have transport
systems? Which do not? Explain your reasoning!
How can the paramecium and hydra thrive with no
circulatory system?
6Open vs. Closed Systems
Which system seems more efficient? What are your
reasons?
7Open Circulatory System
- Body fluid is pumped through open ended vessels
and bathes organs. - Occurs in insects, crabs, and other animals that
have exoskeletons - Body fluid is circulated by the heart
- How efficient is this? Why?
8Why Do Bugs Make Such a Mess?
9Closed Circulatory Systems
- Blood is confined to major vessels which branch
into smaller vessels that carry blood to organs. - Blood is pumped through the body by the heart.
- Blood flow is faster than in an open system
- If you are a cheetah, what type of circulatory
system would you need? Why?
10Several types of blood vessels exist in the
circulatory systems of vertebrates.
- What are the three types of blood vessels?
- Arteries, capillaries, veins
11Blood Vessels
12Blood Vessels
- Blood travels through three types of vessels
- What are some differences you notice between
these vessels? - 1. Arteries 2. Capillaries 3. Veins
13Blood Vessels
- Blood is carried in a closed system of vessels
that begins and ends at the heart - The three major types of vessels are arteries,
capillaries, and veins - Arteries carry blood away from the heart, veins
carry blood toward the heart - Capillaries contact tissue cells and directly
serve cellular needs
14Elastic (Conducting) Arteries
- Thick-walled arteries near the heart the aorta
and its major branches - Large lumen allow low-resistance conduction of
blood - Contain elastin in all three tunics
- Withstand and smooth out large blood pressure
fluctuations - Allow blood to flow fairly continuously through
the body
15Arteries of the Head and Neck
16Arteries of the Brain
17Arteries of the Upper Limbs and Thorax
18Arteries of the Abdomen
19Arteries of the Lower Limbs
20Muscular (Distributing) Arteries and Arterioles
- Muscular arteries distal to elastic arteries
deliver blood to body organs - Have thick tunica media with more smooth muscle
and less elastic tissue - Active in vasoconstriction
- Arterioles smallest arteries lead to capillary
beds - Control flow into capillary beds via vasodilation
and constriction
21Capillaries
- Capillaries are the smallest blood vessels
- Walls consisting of a thin tunica interna, one
cell thick - Allow only a single RBC to pass at a time
- Pericytes on the outer surface stabilize their
walls - There are three structural types of capillaries
continuous, fenestrated, and sinusoids
22Capillary Beds
- A microcirculation of interwoven networks of
capillaries, consisting of - Vascular shunts metarteriolethoroughfare
channel connecting an arteriole directly with a
postcapillary venule - True capillaries 10 to 100 per capillary bed,
capillaries branch off the metarteriole and
return to the thoroughfare channel at the distal
end of the bed
23Venous System Veins
- Veins are
- Formed when venules converge
- Composed of three tunics, with a thin tunica
media and a thick tunica externa consisting of
collagen fibers and elastic networks - Capacitance vessels (blood reservoirs) that
contain 65 of the blood supply
24Venous System Veins
- Veins have much lower blood pressure and thinner
walls than arteries - To return blood to the heart, veins have special
adaptations - Large-diameter lumens, which offer little
resistance to flow - Valves (resembling semilunar heart valves), which
prevent backflow of blood - Venous sinuses specialized, flattened veins
with extremely thin walls (e.g., coronary sinus
of the heart and dural sinuses of the brain)
25Factors Aiding Venous Return
26What is the purpose of the valves found in veins?
Keep blood flowing toward the heart.
So what happened here?
27Why must the capillary walls be so thin?
So materials can diffuse through the wall for
exchange.
28Veins of Systemic Circulation
29Veins of the Head and Neck
30Veins of the Brain
31Veins of the Upper Limbs and Thorax
32Veins of the Abdomen
33Veins of the Pelvis and Lower Limbs
34Blood Vessels - Summary
- Arteries carry blood away from the heart,
thickest walls - Veins carry blood toward the heart, thinner
walls, one-way valves - Capillaries extremely thin walls, sites of
exchange in lungs and body cells
35- ARTHERIOSCLEROSISThe narrowing of blood vessels
due to build- up of fats that turn into plaque on
the artery and vein walls.
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37How do these three different circulatory systems
compare?
What are systemic capillaries? Capillaries that
are located throughout the body
38Circulation in Fish
How many chambers does the heart have? -2
chambered heart How many loops does this
circulatory system have? 1 Blood is oxygenated in
gills and travels to the body Heart? gills?
systemic? heart
39Circulation In Amphibians and Reptiles
How many chambers does the reptilian heart
have? -3 chambered heart How many loops does this
circulatory system have? 2 (double loop
circulatory system) Trace the blood flow through
the body Heart? lungs? heart? systemic Where is
the inefficiency in the amphibian 3-chambered
system?
40The Heart and Blood Flow in Mammals
- How many chambers are there?
- -4 chambered heart
- How many loops?
- 2
- Trace the blood flow through the body
- Heart? lung? heart? systems
-
- How is this heart more efficient than the
reptilian heart?
41Heart Animation
42Heart Anatomy
43The Circulatory System
44Coverings of the Heart PhysiologyThe
pericardium
- Protects and anchors the heart
- Prevents overfilling of the heart with blood
- Allows for the heart to work in a relatively
friction-free environment
45Heart Wall
- Epicardium visceral layer of the serous
pericardium - Myocardium cardiac muscle layer forming the
bulk of the heart - Fibrous skeleton of the heart crisscrossing,
interlacing layer of connective tissue - Endocardium endothelial layer of the inner
myocardial surface
46- External Heart Major Vessels of the Heart
(Anterior View) - Vessels returning blood to the heart include
- Superior and inferior venae cavae
- Right and left pulmonary veins
- Vessels conveying blood away from the heart
include - Pulmonary trunk, which splits into right and left
pulmonary arteries - Ascending aorta (three branches)
brachiocephalic, left common carotid, and
subclavian arteries
47External Heart Major Vessels of the Heart
(Posterior View)
- Vessels returning blood to the heart include
- Right and left pulmonary veins
- Superior and inferior venae cavae
- Vessels conveying blood away from the heart
include - Aorta
- Right and left pulmonary arteries
48Gross Anatomy of Heart Frontal Section
49Atria of the Heart
- Atria are the receiving chambers of the heart
- Each atrium has a protruding auricle
- Pectinate muscles mark atrial walls
- Blood enters right atria from superior and
inferior venae cavae and coronary sinus - Blood enters left atria from pulmonary veins
50Ventricles of the Heart
- Ventricles are the discharging chambers of the
heart - Papillary muscles and trabeculae carneae muscles
mark ventricular walls - Right ventricle pumps blood into the pulmonary
trunk - Left ventricle pumps blood into the aorta
51Pathway of Blood Through the Heart and Lungs
- Right atrium ? tricuspid valve ? right ventricle
- Right ventricle ? pulmonary semilunar valve ?
pulmonary arteries ? lungs - Lungs ? pulmonary veins ? left atrium
- Left atrium ? bicuspid valve ? left ventricle
- Left ventricle ? aortic semilunar valve ? aorta
- Aorta ? systemic circulation
52Pathway of Blood Through the Heart and Lungs
53Coronary Circulation Arterial Supply
54Coronary Circulation Venous Supply
55Heart Valves
- Heart valves ensure unidirectional blood flow
through the heart - Atrioventricular (AV) valves lie between the
atria and the ventricles - AV valves prevent backflow into the atria when
ventricles contract - Chordae tendineae anchor AV valves to papillary
muscles
56Heart Valves
- Aortic semilunar valve lies between the left
ventricle and the aorta - Pulmonary semilunar valve lies between the right
ventricle and pulmonary trunk - Semilunar valves prevent backflow of blood into
the ventricles
57Heart Valves
58Heart Valves
59Atrioventricular Valve Function
60Semilunar Valve Function
61Microscopic Anatomy of Heart Muscle
62The Heart
63The Mammalian Heart
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65The Cardiac Cycle
- The heart is composed of cardiac muscle and each
beat is a muscle contraction and relaxation - Contraction Systolic Pressure
- Relaxation Diastolic pressure
- How is blood pressure written?
- Systolic / diastolic
66Heart Physiology Sequence of Excitation
67Heart Excitation Related to ECG
68Extrinsic Innervation of the Heart
- Heart is stimulated by the sympathetic
cardioacceleratory center - Heart is inhibited by the parasympathetic
cardioinhibitory center
69Electrocardiography
70Heart Sounds
- Heart sounds (lub-dup) are associated with
closing of heart valves - First sound occurs as AV valves close and
signifies beginning of systole - Second sound occurs when SL valves close at the
beginning of ventricular diastole
71Cardiac Cycle
- Cardiac cycle refers to all events associated
with blood flow through the heart - Systole contraction of heart muscle
- Diastole relaxation of heart muscle
72Preload and Afterload
73Regulation of Heart Rate Autonomic Nervous
System
- Sympathetic nervous system (SNS) stimulation is
activated by stress, anxiety, excitement, or
exercise - Parasympathetic nervous system (PNS) stimulation
is mediated by acetylcholine and opposes the SNS - PNS dominates the autonomic stimulation, slowing
heart rate and causing vagal tone
74Factors Involved in Regulation of Cardiac Output
75Blood Pressure
- What is blood pressure?
- The force that blood exerts against vessel walls
- Is BP greater in arteries or veins?
- In arteries
- Find your pulse- what are you feeling here?
- Pulse is measure of BP
- Which would have a higher blood pressure,
constricted blood or dilated vessels? - Constricted vessels
- Does the BP have an effect on veins?
- No- the pressure is lost in the capillaries
- How, then does blood move in veins?
76- What is average blood pressure?
- 120/80 (mm Hg) of pressure on artery walls.
- Which part of the heart contracts first?
- The atria contract first, followed immediately by
the ventricles.
77Systemic Blood Pressure
- The pumping action of the heart generates blood
flow through the vessels along a pressure
gradient, always moving from higher- to
lower-pressure areas - Pressure results when flow is opposed by
resistance - Systemic pressure
- Is highest in the aorta
- Declines throughout the length of the pathway
- Is 0 mm Hg in the right atrium
- The steepest change in blood pressure occurs in
the arterioles
78Arterial Blood Pressure
- Systolic pressure pressure exerted on arterial
walls during ventricular contraction - Diastolic pressure lowest level of arterial
pressure during a ventricular cycle - Pulse pressure the difference between systolic
and diastolic pressure - Mean arterial pressure (MAP) pressure that
propels the blood to the tissues - MAP diastolic pressure 1/3 pulse pressure
79Blood Pressure
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81- Cardiac Output (CO)
- Volume of blood pumped/ minute
- Stroke Volume (SV)
- Amount of blood pumped by the left ventricle each
time it contracts (about 75 mL per beat for the
average person) - 75 X 70 5250 mL/min.
- CO is affected by heart rate and SV
82Alterations in Blood Pressure
- Hypotension low BP in which systolic pressure
is below 100 mm Hg - Hypertension condition of sustained elevated
arterial pressure of 140/90 or higher - Transient elevations are normal and can be caused
by fever, physical exertion, and emotional upset - Chronic elevation is a major cause of heart
failure, vascular disease, renal failure, and
stroke
83Hypotension
- Orthostatic hypotension temporary low BP and
dizziness when suddenly rising from a sitting or
reclining position - Chronic hypotension hint of poor nutrition and
warning sign for Addisons disease - Acute hypotension important sign of circulatory
shock - Threat to patients undergoing surgery and those
in intensive care units
84Hypertension
- Hypertension maybe transient or persistent
- Primary or essential hypertension risk factors
in primary hypertension include diet, obesity,
age, race, heredity, stress, and smoking - Secondary hypertension due to identifiable
disorders, including excessive renin secretion,
arteriosclerosis, and endocrine disorders
85How Does Your Heart Beat?
- Can you control the beating of your own heart?
- No- the heart muscles contract on their own.
- The heart has a pacemaker, or SA node, that
maintains the hearts rhythm.
86The pacemaker sets the tempo of the heartbeat.
87Blood Composition continued...
Diagramatic View
Real Blood Cells
88Overview of Blood Circulation
- Blood leaves the heart via arteries that branch
repeatedly until they become capillaries - Oxygen (O2) and nutrients diffuse across
capillary walls and enter tissues - Carbon dioxide (CO2) and wastes move from tissues
into the blood
89Overview of Blood Circulation
- Oxygen-deficient blood leaves the capillaries and
flows in veins to the heart - This blood flows to the lungs where it releases
CO2 and picks up O2 - The oxygen-rich blood returns to the heart
90Composition of Blood
- Blood is the bodys only fluid tissue
- It is composed of liquid plasma and formed
elements - Formed elements include
- Erythrocytes, or red blood cells (RBCs)
- Leukocytes, or white blood cells (WBCs)
- Platelets
- Hematocrit the percentage of RBCs out of the
total blood volume
91Blood
92Blood is the Liquid Tissue
- 55 of blood is plasma (mostly water) carries
nutrients, wastes and important proteins like
antibodies and clotting factors. - 45 is made of cells
- Red, white blood cells and platelets
- Erythrocytes (RBC)
- contain hemoglobin and carry oxygen
- Leukocytes (WBC) are usually stored in the bone
marrow, and are the bodys defense system - Platelets are pieces of white blood cells that
are in charge of clotting
Red blood cell
Platelet
White blood cell
93Components of Whole Blood
94Physical Characteristics and Volume
- Blood is a sticky, opaque fluid with a metallic
taste - Color varies from scarlet (oxygen-rich) to dark
red (oxygen-poor) - The pH of blood is 7.357.45
- Temperature is 38?C, slightly higher than
normal body temperature - Blood accounts for approximately 8 of body
weight - Average volume of blood is 56 L for males, and
45 L for females
95DistributionBlood transports
- Oxygen from the lungs and nutrients from the
digestive tract - Metabolic wastes from cells to the lungs and
kidneys for elimination - Hormones from endocrine glands to target organs
96RegulationBlood maintains
- Appropriate body temperature by absorbing and
distributing heat - Normal pH in body tissues using buffer systems
- Adequate fluid volume in the circulatory system
97- Blood plasma contains over 100 solutes,
including - Proteins albumin, globulins, clotting proteins,
and others - Nonprotein nitrogenous substances lactic acid,
urea, creatinine - Organic nutrients glucose, carbohydrates, amino
acids - Electrolytes sodium, potassium, calcium,
chloride, bicarbonate - Respiratory gases oxygen and carbon dioxide
98Erythrocytes (RBCs)
- Biconcave discs, anucleate, essentially no
organelles - Filled with hemoglobin (Hb), a protein that
functions in gas transport - Contain the plasma membrane protein spectrin and
other proteins that - Give erythrocytes their flexibility
- Allow them to change shape as necessary
99Structure of Hemoglobin
100Hemoglobin
- Oxyhemoglobin hemoglobin bound to oxygen
- Oxygen loading takes place in the lungs
- Deoxyhemoglobin hemoglobin after oxygen
diffuses into tissues (reduced Hb) - Carbaminohemoglobin hemoglobin bound to carbon
dioxide - Carbon dioxide loading takes place in the tissues
101Production of Erythrocytes
- Hematopoiesis blood cell formation
- Hematopoiesis occurs in the red bone marrow of
the - Axial skeleton and girdles
- Epiphyses of the humerus and femur
- Hemocytoblasts give rise to all formed elements
102Dietary Requirements of Erythropoiesis
- Erythropoiesis requires
- Proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates
- Iron, vitamin B12, and folic acid
- The body stores iron in Hb (65), the liver,
spleen, and bone marrow - Intracellular iron is stored in protein-iron
complexes such as ferritin and hemosiderin - Circulating iron is loosely bound to the
transport protein transferrin
103Fate and Destruction of Erythrocytes
- The life span of an erythrocyte is 100120 days
- Old erythrocytes become rigid and fragile, and
their hemoglobin begins to degenerate - Dying erythrocytes are engulfed by macrophages
- Heme and globin are separated and the iron is
salvaged for reuse
104Fate and Destruction of Erythrocytes
- Heme is degraded to a yellow pigment called
bilirubin - The liver secretes bilirubin into the intestines
as bile - The intestines metabolize it into urobilinogen
- This degraded pigment leaves the body in feces,
in a pigment called stercobilin - Globin is metabolized into amino acids and is
released into the circulation - Hb released into the blood is captured by
haptoglobin and phgocytized
105Life Cycle of Red Blood Cells
106Erythrocyte Disorders
- Anemia blood has abnormally low oxygen-carrying
capacity - It is a symptom rather than a disease itself
- Blood oxygen levels cannot support normal
metabolism - Signs/symptoms include fatigue, paleness,
shortness of breath, and chills
107Anemia Insufficient Erythrocytes
- Hemorrhagic anemia result of acute or chronic
loss of blood - Hemolytic anemia prematurely ruptured
erythrocytes - Aplastic anemia destruction or inhibition of
red bone marrow
108Anemia Decreased Hemoglobin Content
- Iron-deficiency anemia results from
- A secondary result of hemorrhagic anemia
- Inadequate intake of iron-containing foods
- Impaired iron absorption
- Pernicious anemia results from
- Deficiency of vitamin B12
- Lack of intrinsic factor needed for absorption of
B12 - Treatment is intramuscular injection of B12
application of Nascobal
109Anemia Abnormal Hemoglobin
- Thalassemias absent or faulty globin chain in
hemoglobin - Erythrocytes are thin, delicate, and deficient in
hemoglobin - Sickle-cell anemia results from a defective
gene coding for an abnormal hemoglobin called
hemoglobin S (HbS) - HbS has a single amino acid substitution in the
beta chain - This defect causes RBCs to become sickle-shaped
in low oxygen situations
110Leukocytes (WBCs)
- Leukocytes, the only blood components that are
complete cells - Are less numerous than RBCs
- Make up 1 of the total blood volume
- Can leave capillaries via diapedesis
- Move through tissue spaces
- Leukocytosis WBC count over 11,000 per cubic
millimeter - Normal response to bacterial or viral invasion
111Granulocytes
- Granulocytes neutrophils, eosinophils, and
basophils - Contain cytoplasmic granules that stain
specifically (acidic, basic, or both) with
Wrights stain - Are larger and usually shorter-lived than RBCs
- Have lobed nuclei
- Are all phagocytic cells
112Neutrophils
- Neutrophils have two types of granules that
- Take up both acidic and basic dyes
- Give the cytoplasm a lilac color
- Contain peroxidases, hydrolytic enzymes, and
defensins (antibiotic-like proteins) - Neutrophils are our bodys bacteria slayers
113Eosinophils
- Eosinophils account for 14 of WBCs
- Have red-staining, bilobed nuclei connected via a
broad band of nuclear material - Have red to crimson (acidophilic) large, coarse,
lysosome-like granules - Lead the bodys counterattack against parasitic
worms - Lessen the severity of allergies by phagocytizing
immune complexes
114Basophils
- Account for 0.5 of WBCs and
- Have U- or S-shaped nuclei with two or three
conspicuous constrictions - Are functionally similar to mast cells
- Have large, purplish-black (basophilic) granules
that contain histamine - Histamine inflammatory chemical that acts as a
vasodilator and attracts other WBCs
(antihistamines counter this effect)
115Agranulocytes
- Agranulocytes lymphocytes and monocytes
- Lack visible cytoplasmic granules
- Are similar structurally, but are functionally
distinct and unrelated cell types - Have spherical (lymphocytes) or kidney-shaped
(monocytes) nuclei
116Lymphocytes
- Account for 25 or more of WBCs and
- Have large, dark-purple, circular nuclei with a
thin rim of blue cytoplasm - Are found mostly enmeshed in lymphoid tissue
(some circulate in the blood) - There are two types of lymphocytes T cells and B
cells - T cells function in the immune response
- B cells give rise to plasma cells, which produce
antibodies
117Monocytes
- Monocytes account for 48 of leukocytes
- They are the largest leukocytes
- They have abundant pale-blue cytoplasms
- They have purple-staining, U- or kidney-shaped
nuclei - They leave the circulation, enter tissue, and
differentiate into macrophages
118Monocytes
- Macrophages
- Are highly mobile and actively phagocytic
- Activate lymphocytes to mount an immune response
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121Formation of Leukocytes
122Leukocytes Disorders Leukemias
- Leukemia refers to cancerous conditions involving
white blood cells - Leukemias are named according to the abnormal
white blood cells involved - Myelocytic leukemia involves myeloblasts
- Lymphocytic leukemia involves lymphocytes
- Acute leukemia involves blast-type cells and
primarily affects children - Chronic leukemia is more prevalent in older
people
123Leukemia
- Immature white blood cells are found in the
bloodstream in all leukemias - Bone marrow becomes totally occupied with
cancerous leukocytes - The white blood cells produced, though numerous,
are not functional - Death is caused by internal hemorrhage and
overwhelming infections - Treatments include irradiation, antileukemic
drugs, and bone marrow transplants
124Platelets
- Platelets are fragments of megakaryocytes with a
blue-staining outer region and a purple granular
center - Their granules contain serotonin, Ca2, enzymes,
ADP, and platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) - Platelets function in the clotting mechanism by
forming a temporary plug that helps seal breaks
in blood vessels - Platelets not involved in clotting are kept
inactive by NO and prostaglandin I2
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127Detailed Events of Coagulation
128- HemoglobinIs the protein attahced to the red
blood cell that carries oxygen around the blood
stream. It gets its help from an iron molecule. - Antigens- Substances that stimulate an immune
response. They recognize foreign objects.
129ABO Blood Groups
- Type A (antigen A- antibody B)
- Type B(antigen B- antibody A)
- Type AB(antigens A and B, anibodies A and B)
- Type O (No antigens or antibodies A and B)
- rH factor (antigen rH-Either you have it
(positive) or you dont (negative).
130ABO Blood Groups
- The ABO blood groups consists of
- Two antigens (A and B) on the surface of the RBCs
- Two antibodies in the plasma (anti-A and anti-B)
- An individual with ABO blood may have various
types of antigens and spontaneously preformed
antibodies - Agglutinogens and their corresponding antibodies
cannot be mixed without serious hemolytic
reactions
131ABO Blood Groups
132Rh Blood Groups
- There are eight different Rh agglutinogens, three
of which (C, D, and E) are common - Presence of the Rh agglutinogens on RBCs is
indicated as Rh - Anti-Rh antibodies are not spontaneously formed
in Rh individuals - However, if an Rh individual receives Rh blood,
anti-Rh antibodies form - A second exposure to Rh blood will result in a
typical transfusion reaction
133Blood Typing
- When serum containing anti-A or anti-B
agglutinins is added to blood, agglutination will
occur between the agglutinin and the
corresponding agglutinogens - Positive reactions indicate agglutination
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135Prevention of Undesirable Clots
- Substances used to prevent undesirable clots
include - Aspirin an antiprostaglandin that inhibits
thromboxane A2 - Heparin an anticoagulant used clinically for
pre- and postoperative cardiac care - Warfarin used for those prone to atrial
fibrillation
136Hemostasis Disorders Bleeding Disorders
- Thrombocytopenia condition where the number of
circulating platelets is deficient - Patients show petechiae (small purple blotches on
the skin) due to spontaneous, widespread
hemorrhage - Caused by suppression or destruction of bone
marrow (e.g., malignancy, radiation) - Platelet counts less than 50,000/mm3 is
diagnostic for this condition - Treated with whole blood transfusions
137Hemostasis Disorders Bleeding Disorders
- Hemophilias hereditary bleeding disorders
caused by lack of clotting factors - Hemophilia A most common type (83 of all
cases) due to a deficiency of factor VIII - Hemophilia B results from a deficiency of
factor IX - Hemophilia C mild type, caused by a deficiency
of factor XI
138Hemostasis Disorders
- Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
widespread clotting in intact blood vessels - Residual blood cannot clot
- Blockage of blood flow and severe bleeding
follows - Most common as
- A complication of pregnancy
- A result of septicemia or incompatible blood
transfusions
139RBC formation animation
140The Lymphatic System
White Blood Cells
141Intracellular fluids and proteins are returned
to the blood by the lymphatic system
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143Blood clotting animation
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145Fun Facts
Just Fun! You Don't Have to Memorize These!
- There are almost 60,000 miles of blood vessels
in the human body. - Red blood cells are formed at the rate of 2
million per second. - Within a tiny droplet of blood, there are 5
million red blood cells, 300,000 platelets and
10,000 white cells. - It takes about 1 minute for a red blood cell
to circle the whole body.