Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood...

20
Chapter 12 Circulat ion Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels

description

Transportation Most substances that need to get from one part of the body to another are carried by the blood. –Example: Blood carries oxygen from your lungs to your body cells. The wastes from cells are also carried by the blood in the same manner. –Example: Carbon dioxide passes from the cells in blood to the lungs where it is exhaled.

Transcript of Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood...

Page 1: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Chapter 12CirculationSections 1 and 2

The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at

Blood Vessels

Page 2: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Movement of Materials

• Like the roads that link all parts of the country, your body has a “highway” network, called the circulatory system.

• This system consists of the heart, blood vessels, and blood.

• The cardiovascular system carries needed substances to cells and carries waste products away from cells.

Page 3: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Transportation

• Most substances that need to get from one part of the body to another are carried by the blood.– Example: Blood carries oxygen from your

lungs to your body cells.• The wastes from cells are also carried by

the blood in the same manner.– Example: Carbon dioxide passes from the cells

in blood to the lungs where it is exhaled.

Page 4: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Disease Fighters

• The cardiovascular system also transports cells that attack disease-causing microorganisms.

• If you get sick, these disease-fighting blood cells will kill the microorganisms to help you get well.

Page 5: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Structure and Function of the Heart

• The heart is a hollow, muscular organ that pumps blood throughout the body. Without the heart, blood wouldn’t go anywhere.

• Each time the heart beats, it pushes blood through the blood vessels of the cardiovascular system.

• What type of muscle is the heart made of?– Cardiac muscle

Page 6: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

• The heart has two sides completely separated from each other by a wall of tissue.

• Each of the two sides has compartments called chambers, upper and lower.

• Each upper chamber is called an atrium, this is the part which receives the blood.

• The lower chamber is called the ventricle, this is the part that pumps blood out of the heart.

• The atria are separated from the ventricles by valves, a flap of tissue that prevents blood from flowing backward.

Page 7: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

How the Heart Works

• The action of the heart has two main phases. In one phase, the heart muscle relaxes and the atria fill with blood.

• In the other phase, the atria contract and fill the ventricles.

• Then the ventricles contract to pump blood forward.

Page 8: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

The Heart

Page 9: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Regulation of Heartbeat

• A group of cells called the pacemaker, located in the right atrium, sends out signals that make the heart muscle contract.

• The pacemaker adjusts the heart rate to match the internal stimuli about the body’s oxygen needs.

• As you exercise more, your muscles need more oxygen. Your rapid heartbeat supplies blood that carries oxygen to these muscles.

Page 10: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Artificial Pacemaker• In some people, the pacemaker becomes

damaged as a result of disease or an accident.

• In the 1950’s, doctors and engineers developed an artificial, battery-operated pacemaker.

• The artificial pacemaker is implanted beneath the skin and connected by wires to the heart, which send impulses making the heart contract at a normal rate.

Page 11: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

The Loop• After leaving the heart, blood travels in blood

vessels through the body.• Arteries are blood vessels that carry blood away

from the heart.• From the smallest arteries, blood flows into tiny

vessels called capillaries.• In the capillaries, substances are exchanged

between the blood and body cells.• From the capillaries, blood flows into veins, which

are the vessels that carry blood back to the heart to gain oxygen.

Page 12: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

In the first loop, blood travels from

the heart to the lungs and then back

to the heart. In the second loop,

blood is pumped from the heart

throughout the body and then returns

again to the heart.

Page 13: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Chapter 12 Section 2

A Closer Look at Blood VesselsTurn to page 407 in your textbooks

Page 14: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Arteries

• When blood leaves the heart, it travels through arteries.

• Every organ receives blood from arteries that branch off the aorta.

• The first branches, called the coronary arteries, carry blood to the heart itself.

• Other branches carry blood to the brain, intestines, and other organs. Each of which branches into smaller and smaller arteries.

Page 15: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Artery Structure

• The walls of arteries are generally very thick. They consist of 3 layers:– Epithelial tissue– Smooth muscle– Connective tissue

• They need strength and flexibility to withstand the pressures of blood pumped by the heart.

Page 16: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Pulse and Blood Regulation• If you lightly touch the inside of your wrist, you

can feel the artery in your wrist rise and fall repeatedly, this is your pulse. You can determine how fast your heart is beating by taking your pulse rate. Can you find your pulse?

• Every time the heart’s ventricles contract, they send a spurt of blood out through all the arteries in your body, this is what causes the rise and fall of the arteries in your wrists.

• The muscles in the middle wall of an artery are involuntary. When they contract, the opening in the artery becomes smaller. When they relax, the opening becomes larger. These muscles act as control gates and sends the blood where it needs to go.

Page 17: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Capillaries• In the capillaries, materials are exchanged

between the blood and the body’s cells.• Capillary walls are only one cell thick, this allows

the exchange of materials. • Materials passed are

– Oxygen and glucose.• Materials are exchanged between the blood and

the body cells by diffusion, the process by which molecules move from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.

• Remember: Concentration is the amount of the substance in a given volume.

Page 18: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Veins• After blood moves through capillaries, it enters

larger blood vessels called veins, which carry blood back to the heart.

• The walls of veins, like those of arteries, have three layers but are much thinner.

• Because of the distance from the heart, the heart’s pulse does not push the blood through the veins, the skeletal muscles’ contractions help push the blood along as you move.

• Larger veins have valves in them that prevent the blood from flowing backward.

Page 19: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Blood Pressure

• Blood traveling through blood vessels behaves in a manner similar to that of water moving through a hose.

• Blood exerts a pressure, called blood pressure, against the walls of blood vessels.

• Blood pressure is caused by the force with which the ventricles contract.

Page 20: Chapter 12 Circulation Sections 1 and 2 The Body’s Transportation and A Closer Look at Blood Vessels.

Measuring Blood Pressure• Blood pressure can be measured with an

instrument called a sphygmomanometer, which contains a tube of mercury.

• Blood pressure is expressed in millimeters of mercury and is recorded as two numbers.

• The first number, which is the higher of the two, is a measure of the blood pressure while the left ventricle contracts.

• The second number measures the blood pressure while the ventricle relaxes between heartbeats.

• The two numbers are written as a fraction:Contraction pressureRelaxation pressure