Mass Transport in Mammals (Haemoglobin & Cardiac Cycle) 3.4.1 Flashcards

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1
Q

The oxygen dissociation curve of the foetus is to the left of that for its mother. Explain the advantage of this for the foetus [3]

A
  1. Higher affinity so associates/loads more oxygen;
  2. At low/same/high partial pressure/pO2;
  3. Oxygen moves from mother to foetus.
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2
Q

Describe how haemoglobin normally loads oxygen in the lungs and unloads it in a tissue cell.

A

• Oxygen combines (reversibly) to form oxyhaemoglobin;
• Each haemoglobin molecule can transport 4 molecules of oxygen/8 atoms of oxygen;
• High partial pressure of O2 in lungs;
• Haemoglobin 95% saturated/almost 100%;
• Dissociates/Unloads at low partial pressure of O2 in tissues;
• Presence of CO2 displaces curve further to the right/increases oxygen dissociation;
• Allows more O2 to be dissociated;
• Increase in temperature/acidity allows more O2 to be dissociated;
• Low pO2/increased CO2 in respiring tissue.

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3
Q

Explain how oxygen in a red blood cell is made available for respiration in active tissues.

A
  1. Presence of CO2 increases respiration;
  2. Increased oxygen dissociation from haemoglobin;
  3. (Because of) low partial pressure in tissues/plasma;
  4. Oxygen diffuses from red blood cell to (respiring) tissues (high affinity)
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4
Q

The oxygen dissociation curve of the foetus is to the left of that for its mother. Explain the advantage of this for the foetus.

A
  1. Higher affinity so associates/loads more oxygen (than Mother);
  2. At low/same/high partial pressure;
  3. Oxygen moves from mother to foetus (dependent on O2 from placental blood)
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5
Q

Explain how oxygen is loaded, transported and unloaded in the blood (5)

A
  1. Haemoglobin carries oxygen/has high affinity for O2;
  2. Hb in red blood cells;
  3. Association/loading in lungs at high partial pressure;
  4. Unloads/dissociates to respiring tissues at low pO2;
  5. Unloading linked to higher carbon dioxide concentration.
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6
Q

Binding of one molecule of oxygen to haemoglobin makes it easier for a second oxygen molecule to bind. Explain why.

A

Cooperative Loading:
1. Binding of first O2 molecule changes tertiary/quaternary structure of Hb (causes conformational change);
2. Leads to/uncovers second/another binding site
OR uncovers another iron/Fe/haem group to bind to.
(2nd, 3rd & 4th molecule associates more readily)

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7
Q

Describe and explain the effect of increasing carbon dioxide concentration on the dissociation of oxyhaemoglobin (2)

A
  1. Increases/more oxygen dissociation/decreases haemoglobin’s O2 affinity;
  2. (By) decreasing (blood) pH/increasing acidity (carbonic acid)
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8
Q

Describe how an arteriole can reduce the blood flow into capillaries

A
  1. Muscle contracts;
  2. Constricts/narrows lumen
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9
Q

Describe how the heart muscle and the heart valves maintain a one-way flow of blood from the left atrium of the aorta.

A
  1. Atrium has higher pressure than ventricle (due to filling/contraction);
  2. (so) Atrioventricular valve opens;
  3. Ventricle has higher pressure than atrium (due to filling/contraction);
  4. (so) Atrioventricular valve closes;
  5. Ventricle has higher pressure than aorta;
  6. (so) Semilunar valve opens;
  7. Aorta has higher pressure than ventricle;
  8. (so) Semilunar valve closes;
  9. (Muscle/atrial/ventricular) contraction causes increase in pressure.
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10
Q

Name 3 common features of the mammalian circulatory system (3)

A
  1. Suitable medium for transport, water-based to allow substances to dissolve;
  2. Means of moving the medium and maintaining pressure throughout the body, such as the heart;
  3. Means of controlling flow so it remains undirectional, such as valves.
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11
Q

Relate the structures of the chambers to their function (2)

A
  1. Atria - thin-walled and elastic - stretch when filled with blood;
  2. Ventricles - thick muscular walls - pump blood under high pressure, thicker than right to pump blood around the body.
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12
Q

Relate the structures of vessels to their function

A
  1. Arteries have thick walls to handle high pressure without tearing, and are muscular and elastic to control blood flow;
  2. Veins have thin walls due to lower pressure, therefore requiring valves to ensure blood doesn’t flow backwards, less muscular and elastic tissue.
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13
Q

Why are two pumps (left and right) needed instead of one?

A
  • To maintain pressure around the body
  • Blood passes through narrow capillaries of the lungs and causes pressure drop, returned to heart to be pumped around the body.
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14
Q

Describe what happens during cardiac diastole

A
  • Heart is relaxed;
  • Increase in pressure as blood enters atrium;
  • Atrioventricular valves open;
  • Blood flows into ventricles;
  • Pressure in heart lower than in arteries, so semilunar valves stay shut.
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15
Q

Describe what happens during atrial systole

A
  • Atria contract
  • Blood is pushed into the ventricles
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16
Q

Describe what happens during ventrical systole

A
  • Ventricles contract;
  • Pressure increases;
  • Atrioventricular valves close to prevent backflow;
  • Semilunar valves open;
  • Blood flows into arteries
17
Q

Name the nodes involved in heart contraction and where they are situated (2) !!

A
  1. Sinoatrial node (SAN) = wall of right atrium;
  2. Atrioventricular node (AVN) = between the two atria.
18
Q

Describe what myogenic means (1)

A

Heart contraction is initiated by muscles, not nerves

19
Q

Explain how the heart contracts (3) !!

A
  1. Sinoatrial node (SAN) initiates and sends impulse to atria to contract;
  2. Atrioventricular node (AVN) recieves, delays and sends impulse down ‘bundle of his.’
  3. Impulse travels to Purkinje fibres (branched across ventricles) so they contract (bottom-up)
20
Q

How are the structures of the capillaries suited to their function?

A
  • Walls are one cell thick - short diffusion pathway;
  • narrow - capillaries can permeate tissues and deliver oxygen;
  • many capillaries and highly branched - large surface area.
21
Q

What is tissue fluid? (1)

A

A liquid containing glucose, amino acids, oxygen and nutrients - it is supplied to cells and removes waste materials.

22
Q

Describe how tissue fluid is formed and how it is returned to the circulatory system (6)

A

FORMED
1. Hydrostatic/high pressure of blood (in small vessels);
2. Forces tissue fluid out of capillary;
3. Large proteins remain in capillary;
RETURN
1. Low water potential in capillary
2. Due to plasma proteins;
3. Fluid enters capillary BY OSMOSIS;
4. Lymph fluid collects excess tissue fluid and deposits back into bloodstream (for recirculation).

23
Q

Arteries and arterioles take blood away from the heart. Explain how the structures of the walls of the arteries and arterioles are related to their functions (6)

A

Elastic Tissue
1. Elastic tissue stretches under pressure/when heart contracts;
2. Recoils;
3. Evens out pressure/flow;

Muscle
1. Muscle contracts;
2. Reduces diameter of lumer/VASOCONSTRICTION;
3. Changes pressure/flow;

Epithelium
1. Smooth surface;
2. Reduces friction/blood clots/less resistance.

24
Q

The thickness of the aorta wall changes all the time during each cardiac cycle. Explain why (4)

A
  1. Aorta wall stretches;
  2. Because ventricle/heart contracts (systole) pressure increase;
  3. Aorta wall recoils;
  4. Because ventricle/heart relaxes (diastole) pressure decrease;
  5. Maintains smooth flow/pressure
25
Q

Heat from respiration helps mammals to maintain a constant body temperature. Explain the relationship between the surface area to volume ratio of mammals and the oxygen dissociation curves of their haemoglobins (5)

A
  1. Smaller mammal has greater SA:V ratio;
  2. Larger mammal with smaller SA:V loses more heat;
  3. Larger mammal has greater rate of respiration;
  4. More oxygen required for respiration so O2 dissociates more readily.