Title: Circulatory System of a Mammal
1Circulatory System of a Mammal
2The Blood System
- The general pattern of blood circulation in a
mammal. Names are required only of the coronary
arteries and of blood vessels entering and
leaving the heart, liver and kidneys. - The structure of arteries, arterioles and veins
in relation to their function. - The structure of capillaries and their importance
in metabolic exchange. - The formation of tissue fluid and its return to
the circulatory system.
3Learning Objectives
- How do large organisms move substances around
their bodies? - What are the features of the transport systems of
large organisms? - How is blood circulated in mammals?
4Why do large organisms need a transport system?
- Increasing size decrease in the SA to Volume
ratio. - Can no longer rely on simple diffusion and need
to develop specialist exchange surfaces
these are linked to transport systems.
5Features of Transport Systems
- A suitable medium in which to carry materials.
- A form of mass transport in which the transport
medium is moved around in bulk over large
distances. - A closed system of tubular vessels that contains
the transport medium.
6Features of Transport Systems
- A mechanism for moving the transport medium
within vessels. - Muscular contraction of the heart or body
muscles. - Passive processes such as evaporation in plants
(see later lessons). - A mechanism to maintain the mass flow in one
direction. - A mechanism of controlling the flow of the
transport medium.
7Transport System in Mammals
- A suitable medium in which to carry materials -
Blood - A form of mass transport in which the transport
medium is moved around in bulk over large
distances. - A closed system of tubular vessels that contains
the transport medium Blood vessels (arteries,
veins and capillaries)
8Transport System in Mammals
- A mechanism for moving the transport medium
within vessels - Muscular contraction of the
heart - A mechanism to maintain the mass flow in one
direction valves - A mechanism of controlling the flow of the
transport medium heart rate, vasodilation,
vasoconstriction
9Single Circulation e.g. fish
Blood passes through heart ONCE per complete
circuit
Blood pressure reduced as blood passes through
the gill capillaries - slows down flow to the
rest of the body Limits the rate of delivery of
O2 and nutrients to cells and removal of
waste Efficient for the level of activity of
fish but not mammals also fish do not maintain
their body temperature need to respire
relatively less compared to mammals
Double Circulation more efficient - e.g. mammals
Heart is composed of two separate pumps right
side pumps blood to the lungs to pick up oxygen
the blood is returned to the left side the left
side pumps oxygenated blood rapidly and at high
pressure to the body the blood is returned to
the right side Higher level of activity (energy)
and need to maintain their body temperature at
370C through respiration Need to deliver and
remove materials to and from cells rapidly
achieved by delivering blood at high pressure to
tissues. Pulmonary oxygenates blood removes
CO2 Systemic oxygenated blood from lungs pumped
rapidly at an increased pressure by the heart
Blood passes through heart TWICE per complete
circuit
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11Questions
- Name the blood vessel in each of the following
descriptions - Joins the right ventricle to the capillaries of
the lungs - Carries oxygenated blood away from the heart
- Carries deoxygenated blood away from the liver
- The first main blood vessel that an oxygen
molecule reaches after being absorbed from an
alveolus - Has the highest blood pressure
12Questions
- State two factors that make it more likely that
an organism will have a circulatory pump such as
the heart. - What is the main advantage of the double
circulation system found in mammals?
13Blood Vessels and their Functions
14Learning Objectives
- What are the structures of arteries, arterioles
and veins? - How is the structure of each of the blood vessels
related to its function? - What is the structure of capillaries and how is
it related to their function?
15Blood Vessels
- Arteries Carry blood away from the heart
- Arterioles Control blood flow from arteries to
capillaries - Capillaries Link arterioles to veins
- Veins Carry blood towards the heart
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17Structure of Blood Vessels
- Tough outer layer resists pressure
- Muscle layer can contract and control the flow
of blood - Elastic layer can stretch and recoil to
maintain blood pressure - Endothelium smooth layer to prevent friction
- Lumen not a layer a cavity
18Structure of Arteries
- Thick muscle layer control the flow of blood
- Thick elastic layer smooth surges from the
heart - No valves
19Structure of Arterioles
- Thicker muscle layer than arteries
- Thinner elastic layer than arteries
- No valves
20Structure of Veins
- Thin muscle layer
- Thin elastic layer
- Valves
21Structure of Capillaries
- No muscle
- No elastic
- No valves
- Thin layer of cells only
22Capillary Structure to Function
- Thin layer of cells short diffusion distance.
- Numerous and highly branched large SA for
diffusion. - Narrow diameter keep all cells close by.
- Narrow lumen bring RBC close to the cells
short diffusion distance. - Spaces between cells allow WBC to escape.
23Capillary endothelium large number large
surface area for exchange Wall - one cell thick
short diffusion distance Endothelium is
continuous throughout circulatory system
Capillary
Artery
Vein
Narrow lumen High pressure Highly elastic
expand and recoil Thick muscular wall to
withstand force more elastic fibres (recoil) No
valves (except aortic and pulmonary semilunar at
the start) Oxygenated blood from heart except
pulmonary artery to lungs Pulsatile blood flow
(expansion recoil) Pulse can be felt e.g.
wrist
Wide lumen Low pressure Thin wall - less elastic
and less muscular Valves (semilunar) prevent
backflow Deoxygenated blood to heart from tissues
- except pulmonary vein from lungs Non pulsatile
smooth flow of blood
24Tissue Fluid
25Tissue Fluid
- What is the role of tissue fluid?
- It is the fluid which allows the exchange of
substances between the blood and cells - What substances are found in tissue fluid?
- glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, salts and
oxygen all delivered to the cells. - carbon dioxide and other waste substances
removed from the cells.
26Hydrostatic pressure
27Hydrostatic Pressure
- As the capillaries are narrower than the
arterioles, a pressure builds up which forces
tissue fluid out of the blood plasma
hydrostatic pressure. - This pressure is resisted by
- Pressure of the tissue fluid on the capillaries
(from the outside) - The lower water potential of the blood (caused by
plasma proteins too large to leave the blood) - Overall, pressure pushes tissue fluid and small
molecules out of the capillary, leaving cells and
large proteins behind ultrafiltration.
28Return of tissue fluid
- Most tissue fluid is returned to the blood plasma
via the capillaries. - Hydrostatic pressure at the venule end of the
capillary is higher outside the capillary and
tissue fluid is forced back in. - Osmotic forces (resulting from the proteins in
the plasma) pull water back into capillaries. - Remaining tissue fluid enters the lymph vessels
drain back into the veins close to the heart.
29Lymph System
30Lymph
- Lymph is moved by
- Hydrostatic pressure
- Contraction of body muscles (aided by valves in
the lymph vessels)