Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

38
Circulatory System (Ch. 42)

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Transcript of Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Page 1: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Circulatory Systems(Ch. 42)

Page 2: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit
Page 3: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Exchange of materials• Animal cells exchange material across their

cell membrane– fuels for energy – nutrients – oxygen – waste (urea, CO2)

• If you are a 1-cell organism that’s easy!– diffusion

• If you are many-celled that’s harder

Page 4: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Overcoming limitations of diffusion

O2

CHO

CHO

aa

aa

CH

CO2

NH3aa

O2

CH

aa

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2 CO2

CO2

CO2

CO2

NH3

NH3 NH3

NH3

NH3

NH3

NH3NH3

O2

aa

CH

aa

CHO

O2

• Diffusion is not adequate for moving material across more than 1-cell barrier

Page 5: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

In circulation…• What needs to be

transported– nutrients & fuels

• from digestive system– respiratory gases

• O2 & CO2 from & to gas exchange systems

– intracellular waste• waste products from

cells: water, salts, nitrogenous wastes

– protective agents• immune defenses

– regulatory molecules• hormones

Page 6: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Circulatory systems• All animals have:

– circulatory fluid = “blood”– tubes = blood vessels– muscular pump = heart

open closed

hemolymph

blood

Page 7: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Open circulatory system

• Taxonomy– invertebrates

• insects, arthropods, mollusks

• Structure– no separation

between blood & interstitial fluid • hemolymph

Page 8: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Closed circulatory system• Taxonomy

– invertebrates• earthworms, squid,

octopuses– vertebrates

• Structure– blood confined to vessels

& separate from interstitial fluid• 1 or more hearts• large vessels to smaller

vessels• material diffuses

between blood vessels & interstitial fluid

closed system = higher pressures

Page 9: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Vertebrate circulatory system• Adaptations in closed system

– number of heart chambers differs

4 chamber heart is double pump = separates oxygen-rich & oxygen-poor blood; maintains high pressure

What’s the adaptive value of a 4 chamber heart?

2 3 4

low pressureto body

low O2

to body

high pressure & high O2

to body

Page 10: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

FISHES AMPHIBIANS REPTILES (EXCEPT BIRDS) MAMMALS AND BIRDS

Systemic capillaries Systemic capillaries Systemic capillaries Systemic capillaries

Lung capillaries Lung capillariesLung and skin capillariesGill capillaries

Right Left Right Left Right Left Systemic

circuitSystemic

circuit

Pulmocutaneouscircuit

Pulmonarycircuit

Pulmonarycircuit

SystemiccirculationVein

Atrium (A)

Heart:ventricle (V)

Artery Gillcirculation

A

V VV VV

A A A AALeft

Systemicaorta

Right systemic

aorta

Evolution of vertebrate circulatory system

Birds ANDmammals!

Wassssup?!

Page 11: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

• Selective forces– increase body size

• protection from predation• bigger body = bigger stomach

– endothermy• can colonize more habitats

– flight• decrease predation & increase hunting

• Effect of higher metabolic rate– greater need for energy, fuels, O2, waste

removal• endothermic animals need 10x energy• need to deliver 10x fuel & O2 to cells

Evolution of 4-chambered heart

convergent

evolution

Page 12: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Vertebrate cardiovascular system

• Chambered heart– atrium = receive blood– ventricle = pump blood out

• Blood vessels– arteries = carry blood away from heart

• arterioles

– veins = return blood to heart• venules

– capillaries = thin wall, exchange / diffusion • capillary beds = networks of capillaries

Page 13: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Blood vesselsarteries

arterioles

capillaries

venules

veins

artery

arteriolesvenules

veins

Page 14: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Arteries: Built for high pressure pump

• Arteries – thicker walls

• provide strength for high pressure pumping of blood

– narrower diameter– elasticity

• elastic recoil helps maintain blood pressure even when heart relaxes

Page 15: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Veins: Built for low pressure flow• Veins

– thinner-walled – wider diameter

• blood travels back to heart at low velocity & pressure

• lower pressure– distant from heart– blood must flow by skeletal muscle

contractions when we move » squeeze blood through veins

– valves• in larger veins one-way valves

allow blood to flow only toward heart

Open valve

Blood flowstoward heart

Closed valve

Page 16: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Capillaries: Built for exchange• Capillaries

– very thin walls • lack 2 outer wall layers • only endothelium

– enhances exchange across capillary

– diffusion• exchange between blood &

cells

Precapillary sphincters Thoroughfarechannel

Arteriole

CapillariesVenule

(a) Sphincters relaxed

(b) Sphincters contracted

VenuleArteriole

(c) Capillaries and larger vessels (SEM) 20 m

Page 17: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Controlling blood flow to tissues• Blood flow in capillaries controlled by

pre-capillary sphincters• supply varies as blood is needed• after a meal, blood supply to digestive tract increases• during strenuous exercise, blood is diverted from digestive tract to

skeletal muscles

– capillaries in brain, heart, kidneys & liver usually filled to capacity

sphincters open sphincters closed

Why?

Page 18: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Exchange across capillary walls

Arteriole

Bloodflow

Venule

Lymphaticcapillary

Interstitialfluid

Fluid & solutes flows out of capillaries to tissues due to blood pressure• “bulk flow”

Interstitial fluid flows back into capillaries due to osmosis plasma proteins osmotic

pressure in capillary

BP > OP BP < OP

15% fluid returns via lymph

85% fluid returns to capillaries

What aboutedema?

Capillary

Page 19: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

The interrelationship of blood flow velocity, cross-sectional area of blood vessels, and blood pressure

5,0004,0003,0002,0001,000

0

5040302010

0

120100806040200

Aor

ta

Art

erie

s

Art

erio

les

Cap

illar

ies

Ven

ules

Vei

ns

Ven

ae c

avae

Pre

ssur

e (m

m H

g)V

eloc

ity (

cm/s

ec)

Are

a (c

m2)

Systolicpressure

Diastolicpressure

Page 20: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Lymphatic system• Parallel circulatory system

– transports white blood cells• defending against infection

– collects interstitial fluid & returns to blood• maintains volume & protein

concentration of blood• drains into circulatory system near

junction of vena cava & right atrium

Page 21: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Lymph system Production & transport of WBCs

Traps foreign invaders

lymph node

lymph vessels(intertwined amongst blood vessels)

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Mammaliancirculation

What do blue vs. red areas represent?

pulmonary

systemic

systemic

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Mammalian heart

Coronary arteries

to neck & head& arms

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Coronary arteries

bypass surgery

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AV

SL

AV

Heart valves

• 4 valves in the heart– flaps of connective tissue– prevent backflow

• Atrioventricular (AV) valve – between atrium & ventricle– keeps blood from flowing back

into atria when ventricles contract• “lub”

• Semilunar valves– between ventricle & arteries– prevent backflow from arteries into

ventricles while they are relaxing• “dub”

Page 26: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

AV

SL

AV

Lub-dub, lub-dub

• Heart sounds – closing of valves– “Lub”

• recoil of blood against closed AV valves

– “Dub”• recoil of blood against

semilunar valves

• Heart murmur– defect in valves causes hissing sound when stream of

blood squirts backward through valve

Page 27: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

• 1 complete sequence of pumping– heart contracts & pumps– heart relaxes & chambers fill – contraction phase

• systole• ventricles pumps blood out

– relaxation phase• diastole• atria refill with blood

Cardiac cycle

systolic________diastolic

pump (peak pressure)_________________fill (minimum pressure)

110____

70

Page 28: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

The control of heart rhythm

SA node(pacemaker)

AV node Bundlebranches

Heartapex

Purkinjefibers

1 2 Signals are delayedat AV node.

Pacemaker generates wave of signals

to contract.

3 Signals passto heart apex.

4 Signals spreadthroughoutventricles.

ECG

Page 29: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Semilunarvalvesclosed

AV valveopen

AV valveclosed

Semilunarvalvesopen

Atrial and ventricular

diastole

1

Atrial systole; ventricular

diastole

2

Ventricular systole; atrial diastole

3

0.1 sec

0.3 sec0.4 sec

The cardiac cycle

Page 30: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Measurement of blood pressure

• High Blood Pressure (hypertension)– if top number (systolic pumping) > 150– if bottom number (diastolic filling) > 90

Artery

Rubber cuffinflatedwith air

Arteryclosed

120 120

70

Pressurein cuff

above120

Pressurein cuff

below 120

Pressurein cuff

below 70

Sounds audible in

stethoscope

Sounds stop

Blood pressureReading: 120/170

Page 31: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Plasma 55%

Constituent Major functions

Water Solvent forcarrying othersubstances

SodiumPotassiumCalcium

MagnesiumChloride

Bicarbonate

Osmotic balancepH buffering, and

regulation of membrane

permeability

Albumin

Fibringen

Immunoglobulins(antibodies)

Plasma proteins

Icons (blood electrolytes

Osmotic balance,pH buffering

Clotting

Defense

Substances transported by bloodNutrients (such as glucose, fatty acids, vitamins)

Waste products of metabolismRespiratory gases (O2 and CO2)

Hormones

Cellular elements 45%

Cell type Numberper L (mm3) of blood

Separatedblood

elements

Functions

Erythrocytes(red blood cells) 5–6 million Transport oxygen

and help transportcarbon dioxide

Leukocytes(white blood cells)

5,000–10,000 Defense andimmunity

Eosinophil

Basophil

Platelets

Neutrophil Monocyte

Lymphocyte

250,000400,000

Blood clotting

The composition of mammalian blood

Page 32: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Differentiation of blood cells

B cells T cells

Lymphoidstem cells

Pluripotent stem cells(in bone marrow)

Myeloidstem cells

Erythrocytes

Platelets Monocytes

Neutrophils

Eosinophils

Basophils

Lymphocytes

Page 33: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Plateletplug

Collagen fibers

Platelet releases chemicalsthat make nearby platelets sticky

Clotting factors from:Platelets

Damaged cellsPlasma (factors include calcium, vitamin K)

Prothrombin Thrombin

Fibrinogen Fibrin5 µm

Fibrin clot Red blood cell

The clotting process begins when the endothelium of a

vessel is damaged, exposing connective tissue in the

vessel wall to blood. Plateletsadhere to collagen fibers in the connective tissue and release a substance that

makes nearby platelets sticky.

1 The platelets form a plug that provides

emergency protectionagainst blood loss.

2This seal is reinforced by a clot of fibrin when

vessel damage is severe. Fibrin is formed via amultistep process: Clotting factors released fromthe clumped platelets or damaged cells mix with

clotting factors in the plasma, forming an activation cascade that converts a plasma protein

called prothrombin to its active form, thrombin.Thrombin itself is an enzyme that catalyzes the

final step of the clotting process, the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin. The threads of fibrin become

interwoven into a patch (see colorized SEM).

3 Blood clotting

Page 34: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Atherosclerosis

(a) Normal artery (b) Partly clogged artery50 µm 250 µm

Smooth muscleConnective tissue Endothelium Plaque

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Coronary Embolism

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Cerebral Aneurysm

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Bloody well asksome questions, already!

Page 38: Animal Physiology I 2010 edit

Make sure you can do the following:1. Label all parts of the mammalian heart and

diagram blood flow through it.2. Explain the causes of circulatory system

disruptions and how disruptions of the circulatory system can lead to disruptions of homeostasis.