Biology: The Vascular System Flashcards
The human cardiovascular system is composed of…
…a muscular, four-chambered heart, a network of blood vessels, and the blood itself.
Heart Function & Anatomy
The heart is the driving force of the circulatory system. The right and left halves can be viewed as two separate pumps: the right side of the heart pumped deoxygenated blood into pulmonary circulation (toward the lungs), whereas the left side pumps oxygenated blood into systemic circulation (throughout the body). The two upper chambers are called atria, and the two lower chambers are called ventricles. The atria are thin-walled, whereas the ventricles are extremely muscular. The left ventricle is more muscular than the right ventricle because it is responsible for generating the force that propels systemic circulation and because it pumps against a higher resistance.I
Heart’s Network of Blood Vessels
Blood is pumped into the aorta, which branches into a series of arteries. The arteries branch into arterioles and then into microscopic capillaries. Exchange of gases, nutrients, and cellular waste products occurs via diffusion across capillary walls. The capillaries then converge into venules and eventually into veins, leading deoxygenated blood back toward the heart.
Atrioventricular Valves
The atrioventricular valves, located between the atria and ventricles on both sides of the heart, prevent backflow of blood into the atria.
The valve on the right side of the heart has three cusps and is called the tricuspid valve.
The valve on the left side of the heart has two cusps and is called the mitral valve.
Semilunar Valves
The semilunar valves have three cusps and are located between the left ventricle and the aorta (the aortic valve) and between the right ventricle and the pulmonary artery (the pulmonic valve).
Systole & Diastole
The heart’s pumping cycle is divided into two alternating phases, systole and diastole, which together make up the heartbeat. Systole is the period during which the ventricles contract. Diastole is the period of cardiac muscle relaxation during which blood drains into all four chambers.
Cardiac Output
Cardiac output is defined as the total volume of blood the left ventricle pumps out perminute. Cardiac output = heart rate (number of beats per minute) x stroke volume (volume of blood pumped out of the left ventricle per contraction).
Mechanism and Control of Heart
Cardiac muscle contracts rhythmically without stimulation from the nervous system, producing impulses that spread through its internal conducting system. An ordinary cardiac contraction originates in, and is regulated by, the sinoatrial (SA) node (the pacemaker), a small mass of specialized tissue located in the wall of the right atrium.
The SA node spreads impulses through both atria, stimulating them to contract simultaneously. The impulse arrives at the atrioventricular (AV) node, which conducts slowly, allowing enough time for atrial contraction and for the ventricles to fill with blood.
The impulse is then carried by the bundle of His (AV bundle), which branches into the right and left bundle branches, and finally through the Purkinje fibers, in the walls of both ventricles, generating a strong contraction.
Autonomic Nervous System Role in Heart
Modifies the rate of heart contraction.
The parasympathetic system innervates the heart via the vagus nerve and causes a decrease in the heart rate.
The sympathetic system innervates the heart via the cervical and upper thoracic ganglia and causes an increase in the heart rate.
The adrenal medulla exerts hormonal control via epinephrine (adrenaline) secretion, which causes an increase in heart rate.
Blood Vessels
The 3 types of blood vessels are arteries, veins, and capillaries.
Arteries are thick-walled, muscular, elastic vessels that transport oxygenated blood away from the heart-except for the pulmonary arteries, which transport deoxygenated blood from the heart to the lungs.
Veins are relatively thinly walled, inelastic vessels that conduct deoxygenated blood toward the heart-except for the pulmonary veins, which carry oxygenated blood from the lungs to the heart. Much of the blood flow in veins depends on their compression by skeletal muscles during movement, rather than on the pumping of the heart. Venous circulation is often at odds with gravity; thus, larger, veins, especially those in the legs, have valves that prevent backflow.
Capillaries have very thin walls composed of a single layer of endothelial cells, across which respiratory gases, nutrients, enzymes, hormones, and wastes can readily diffuse. Capillaries have the smallest diameter of all 3 types of vessels; red blood cells must often travel through them single file.
Lymphatic System & Vessels
The lymphatic system is a secondary circulatory system distinct from the cardiovascular circulation.
Its vessels transport excess interstitial fluid, called lymph, to the cardiovascular system, thereby keeping fluid levels in the body constant.
Lacteals
The smallest lymphatic vessels (lacteals) collect fats in the form of chylomicrons from the villi in the small intestine and deliver them into the bloodstream, bypassing the liver.
Lymph Nodes
Lymph nodes are swellings along lymph vessels containing phagocytic cells (lymphocytes) that filter the lymph, removing and destroying foreign particles and pathogens.
Blood
On the average, the human body contains 4-6 liters of blood. Blood has both liquid (55 percent) and cellular components (45 percent). Plasma is the liquid portion of the blood. It is an aquous mixture of nutrients, salts, respiratory gases, wastes, hormones, and blood proteins (e.g. immunoglobulins, albumin, and fibrinogen). The cellular components of the blood and erythrocytes, leukocytes, and platelets.
Erythrocytes (RBCs)
The oxygen-carrying components of blood. An erythrocyte contains approximately 250 million molecules of hemoglobin, each of which can bind up to four molecules of oxygen.
When hemoglobin binds oxygen, it is called oxygemoglobin. This is the primary form of oxygen transport in the blood.
Erythrocytes have a distinct biconcave, disklike shape, which gives them both increased surface area for gas exchange and greater flexibility for movement through those tiny capillaries.
Erythrocytes are formed from stem cells in the bone marrow, where they lose their nuclei, mitochondria, and membranous organelles.
Once mature, RBCs circulate in the blood for about 120 days, after which they are phagocytized by special cells int he spleen and liver.