1 / 20

CARDIO-VASCULAR SYSTEM

CARDIO-VASCULAR SYSTEM. Circulatory system. Circulation – pumping of blood through the entire body by the heart. What Does C-V System do?. Circulate blood throughout entire body for Transport of oxygen to cells Transport of CO2 away from cells Transport of nutrients (glucose) to cells

Faraday
Download Presentation

CARDIO-VASCULAR SYSTEM

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CARDIO-VASCULAR SYSTEM Circulatory system • Circulation – pumping of blood through the entire body by the heart. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  2. What Does C-V System do? • Circulate blood throughout entire body for • Transport of oxygen to cells • Transport of CO2 away from cells • Transport of nutrients (glucose) to cells • Movement of immune system components (cells, antibodies) • Transport of endocrine gland secretions Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  3. How does it do it? • Heart is pump • Arteries and veins are main tubes (plumbing) • Arteries Away from Heart • Veins to Heart • Diffusion happens in capillaries (oxygen, CO2, glucose diffuse in or out of blood) Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  4. The Heart • Covered by the pericardium. • Has two sides with two chambers. • Blood flows through the heart in one direction. • Valves control the blood flow. • The cardiac conduction system controls the electrical impulses that cause the heart to contract. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  5. Heart Chambers and Valves Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  6. Location of Heart in Thorax Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  7. Systemic • Circulation • Coronary circulation – the circulation of blood within the heart. • Pulmonary circulation – the flow of blood between the heart and lungs. • Systemic circulation –the flow of blood between the heart and the cells of the body. Pulmonary Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  8. Circulation Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  9. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  10. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  11. Blood • Complex mixture of cells, water, and various proteins and sugars. • Fifty-five percent is plasma (liquid). • Forty-five percent is solid. • Hematocrit – measurement of percentage of red blood cells. • Leukocytes – 5 types of white blood cells protect against disease. Basophils. Eosinophils. • Neutrophils. • Lymphocytes. • Monocytes. • Common blood types are O, A, B, and AB. • Rh-factor is a type of antigen that causes the body to produce antibodies. • Rh+ means the Rh factor is present. • Rh– means the Rh factor is not present. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  12. Walls of Arteries and Veins • Tunica externa • Outermost layer • CT w/elastin and collagen • Strengthens, Anchors • Tunica media • Middle layer • Circular Smooth Muscle • Vaso-constriction/dilation • Tunica intima • Innermost layer • Endothelium • Minimize friction • Lumen Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  13. Artery/Vein differences Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  14. Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  15. Capillaries • Microscopic--one cell layer thick • Network • Bathed in extracellular matrix of areolar tissue • Entire goal of C-V system is to get blood into capillaries where diffusion takes place Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  16. Epicardium (most superficial) • – Visceral pleura • Myocardium (middle layer) • Cardiac muscle • Contracts • Endocardium (inner) • Endothelium on CT • Lines the heart • Creates the valves Heart Wall Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  17. Blood supply to heart wall • Rt and Lft Coronary Arteries • Branch from Ascending Aorta • Have multiple branches along heart • Sit in Coronary Sulcus • Coronary Heart Disease • Cardiac Veins • Coronary Sinus (largest) • Many branches feed into sinus • Sit in Coronary Sulcus Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  18. Hepatic Portal System Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  19. Lymphatic System…The Players: • Lymph- clear fluid from loose areolar CT around capillaries • Lymphatic capillaries (near blood capillaries)  • Lymph collecting vessels (small, 3 tunicas, valves) • Lymph nodes (sit along collecting vessels)-clean lymph of pathogens, they are NOT glands • Lymphatic trunks (convergence large collecting vessels) • Lumbar, intestinal, bronchomediastinal, subclavian, jugular • Lymphatic ducts  empty into veins of neck Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

  20. Lymphatic System--Function • Function: to collect excess tissue fluid collecting at arteriole end and return leaked blood proteins to blood (maintain osmotic pressure needed to take up water into bloodstream) • Lymph moved through vessels • Pulse of nearby arteries • Contraction of surrounding skeletal muscle • Regular movement of body (wiggling legs) • Muscle in Tunica Media • Lacteals-lymphatic capillaries w/unique function • In mucosa of small intestine, receive digested fat from intestine • Fatty lymph becomes milky = Chyle • Chyle goes to bloodstream Tajdar Husain Khan, Ph.D.

More Related