3.3.4.1 Circulation Flashcards
1
Q
what causes atrial systole
A
- higher pressure in atria than ventricles
- blood moves into ventricles
- increase ventricular volume, decreased atrial volume
- AV valve opens, semi-lunar valves close
2
Q
what causes ventricular systole
A
- higher pressure in ventricles than atria
- blood moves into the arteries
- increase in arterial volume, decrease in ventricular volume
3
Q
characteristics of arteries
A
- transport blood under highest pressure from heart organs
- accommodate variations in pressure
- have thick elastic tissue to accommodate high pressure
- narrow lumen to resist flow and maintain pressure
- thick muscle wall to contract and control blood flow
4
Q
characteristics of arterioles
A
- transport blood under high pressure
- change diameter to control pressure changes
- have thick elastic tissue to accommodate high pressure
- narrow lumen to resist flow and maintain pressure
- thick muscle wall to contract and control blood flow
5
Q
characteristics of veins
A
- transports blood under lower pressure from organs to heart
- maintain pressure
- have thick elastic tissue to accommodate high pressure
- narrow lumen to resist flow and maintain pressure
- thick muscle wall to contract and control blood flow
6
Q
what is the structure of capillaries
A
- Single layer of squamous (flattened) endothelial cell
- basement membrane of connective tissue
- Narrow (approximately the same diameter as one red blood cell)
7
Q
how does the capillary structure relate to its function
A
- Reduces diffusion distance for rapid diffusion;
- Many capillaries in a network, branch between cells to further minimise diffusion distance
- Reduced velocity of blood flow due to narrow vessels - more time for exchange
8
Q
how is tissue fluid formed
A
- In capillaries the hydrostatic pressure is higher at the arterial end.
- This pushes fluid out of the capillary.
- It is opposed by the water potential of the blood, which is lower than that of the tissue fluid & the hydrostatic pressure of the tissue fluid.
- Overall fluid is forced OUT from the capillary by ultrafiltration
9
Q
how is tissue fluid returned
A
- Further along the capillary, at the venous end, the hydrostatic pressure falls.
- Formation of the tissue fluid reduces the water potential of the blood slightly, because the plasma proteins cannot cross the basement membrane, but the volume of water has decreased
- So fluid moves INTO the capillary, but some tissue fluid (around 10%) drains into the lymphatic system.