Lecture 1 Flashcards
What are the fluid systems in the body?
- Blood Vascular System
- Lymphatic System
- Cerebrospinal Fluid
- Coelomic / Peritoneal Fluid
- Interstitial Fluid
Open systems?
- Where the heart pumps blood to the tissues in closed arteries, without a venous return
- The heart pumps blood into vessels that have open ends
Closed systems?
- Where blood never leaves the vessels
- Blood flows through a continuous circuit of blood vessels
What are the main functions of the blood system?
- The transportation of necessary materials to the cells for their metabolism and synthesis
- The removal of this metabolic waste from each cell to organs that excrete them
Oxygen and nutrients must be supplied to the cells and carbon dioxide and nitrogenous wastes removed. Blood vessels carry this out.
What are blood vessels divided into?
Arteries, capillaries and veins
Blood flow?
Aorta - arteries - arterioles - metarterioles - arterial capillaries - venous capillaries - venules - veins - Vena Cava - Right atrium - Tricuspid valve - Right ventricle - Pulmonary valve - Pulmonary arteries - Lungs (gets O2) - Pulmonary veins - Left atrium - Bicuspid valve - Left ventricle - Aortic valve
What are the 3 layers that make up the walls of arteries and veins?
Tunica Intima, Tunica Media, and Tunica Adventitia/Externa
What is Tunica Intima made from in veins vs. arteries?
Arteries:
- Endothelium
- Elastic fibres
- Collagen fibre
Veins:
- Endothelium
What is Tunica Media made from in veins vs. arteries?
Arteries:
- Smooth muscle [except Aorta]
- Collagen fibres
- Elastic fibres (few) [Aorta sheets]
Veins:
- Smooth muscle - thin layers
What is Tunica Adventitia/Externa made from in veins vs. arteries?
Arteries:
- Collagen fibres
- Elastic fibres (scattered)
Veins:
- Collagen fibres - thick; in layers
Arteries?
- In large arteries (aorta) there is little muscle in the tunica media and it mostly consists of sheets of elastic tissue
- Medium sized arteries have lots of smooth muscle in the tunica media
- They also have a nerve supply from the sympathetic nervous system enabling the control of blood flow
- Take oxygenated blood away from the heart
How do veins compare to arteries?
Veins are similar to arteries in structure but the walls are thinner and have less smooth muscle and elastic tissue
Arteries - Take oxygenated blood away from the heart
Veins - Take deoxygenated blood towards the heart
What is interstitial fluid?
- Fluid between cells
- Provides a medium for diffusion of oxygen, nutrients and waste
- Where most cells obtain their nutrient and oxygen requirements from
What is the function of the circulatory system?
- The time required for diffusion increases with the distance over which the diffusion occurs.
- Some cells, which are at a distance, wouldn’t survive if it depended on diffusion alone.
- So the evolution of circulatory systems allows animals to increase in size and become many cells thick, decreasing the distance that needed materials must diffuse
- It transports oxygen, nutrients, hormones and other materials to the interstitial fluid surrounding the cells, and removed metabolic waste
What are the two main types of circulatory systems?
Open and closed
What are capillaries?
- The tiniest blood vessel (one layer of endothelial cells)
- Grouped in beds in the body
- Have very thin walls that permit exchange of materials between blood and interstitial fluid
- Blood doesn’t continuously flow through the capillary beds, only a tiny number of capillaries are filled with blood
Function of arteries?
- Carries blood away from the heart chamber toward other tissues
When an artery enters an organ, what does it divide into?
Many smaller branches called arterioles
What is the vasa vasorum?
The blood supply feeding into large arteries and veins
What is the purpose of the valves in veins?
Prevent the back flow of blood away from the heart
Preferential channels?
- Beside the capillary beds
- Shunt blood rapidly from the arterial to the venous side
Does blood flow continuously through the capillary beds?
No, only a small number of capillaries are filled
What is the intermittent blood flow in the capillary bed is caused by?
Vasomotion
Vasomotion?
Spontaneous movement back and forth in tone of blood vessel walls, independent of heart beat, innervation or respiration
- When there are increased O2 levels, muscle contracts
- When there are decreased O2 levels, muscle relaxes
(Vasodilation and Vasoconstriction)