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The Circulatory System

The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

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The Heart Heart is made up of cardiac muscle. Is located between the lungs and behind the sternum. Has four chambers. The two upper chambers are called the right and left atriums. The two lower chambers are called the right and left ventricles.

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Page 1: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

The Circulatory System

Page 2: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

The Body’s Delivery System

Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes.

Cardiovascular system includes the heart, kilometers of blood vessels and blood.

Page 3: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

The HeartHeart is made up of

cardiac muscle.Is located between the

lungs and behind the sternum.

Has four chambers.The two upper

chambers are called the right and left atriums.

The two lower chambers are called the right and left ventricles.

Page 4: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

The Heart cont.

The right side of the heart receives blood from the body and pumps it to the lungs.

The left side of the heart does the exact opposite: It receives blood from the lungs and pumps it out to the body.

Page 5: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

The Heart cont.A one-way valve

separates each atrium from the ventricle below it.

The blood flows from an atrium to a ventricle, and then from a ventricle into a blood vessel.

A wall, called the septum, between the two atriums or the two ventricles keeps blood rich in oxygen separate from blood low in oxygen.

Page 6: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Blood Vessels

Arteries– are blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart.

Arteries have thick, elastic walls made of connective tissue and smooth muscle tissue.

Page 7: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Blood vessels cont.

Veins- the blood vessels that carry blood back to the heart are called veins.

Veins have one-way valves that keep blood moving toward the heart.

When skeletal muscles contract, this action squeezes veins and helps blood move toward the heart.

Page 8: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Blood vessels cont.

Capillaries- the walls of capillaries are only one cell thick.

Nutrients and oxygen diffuse into the body cells from capillaries.

Waste materials and carbon dioxide diffuse from body cells into the capillaries.

Page 9: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Functions of Blood

Blood carries oxygen from your lungs to all your body cells. Carbon dioxide diffuses from your body cells into your blood. Your blood carries carbon dioxide to your lungs to be exhaled.

Blood carries waste products from your cells to your kidneys to be removed.

Blood transports nutrients and other substances to your body cells.

Cells and molecules in blood fight infections and help heal wounds.

Page 10: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Parts of the blood

Blood is a tissue made of plasma, red and white blood cells, and platelets.

Blood makes up about 8% of your body’s total mass.

Each part of the blood have different densities, and will separate into four different and distinct layers if centrifuged.

Page 11: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

PlasmaPlasma- the liquid part

of the blood which is made mostly of water.

Makes up more than half the volume of blood.

Nutrients, minerals, and oxygen are dissolved in plasma so that they can be carried to body cells.

Wastes from body cells are also carried in plasma.

Page 12: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Red Blood Cells White Blood Cells

Disk-shapedDon’t have a nuclei

when mature.Contain hemoglobin-

carries oxygen and carbon dioxide

Life span of about 120 days.

Fights bacteria, viruses and other invaders of your body.

Life span varies to a few days to many months

Blood Cells

Page 13: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Platelets

Irregularly shaped cell fragments that help clot blood.

Life span of 5-9 days.When blood is exposed

to air, platelets become sticky and form internal and external “scabs” to catch the blood cells and plasma, thereby stopping bleeding.

Page 14: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Lymphatic System

The lymphatic system is part of the circulatory system, comprising a network of conduits called lymphatic vessels that carry a clear fluid called lymph directionally towards the heart.

Lymph is essentially recycled blood plasma.Lymph contains water, dissolved substances,

and lymphocytes ( a type of white blood cell).Lymphocytes help your body defend itself

against disease-causing organisms.

Page 15: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Functions of the Lymphatic System

The lymphatic system has multiple interrelated functions:

It is responsible for the removal of interstitial fluid from tissues

It absorbs and transports fatty acids and fats as chyle from the digestive system

It transports white blood cells to and from the lymph nodes into the bones

The lymph transports antigen-presenting cells (APCs), such as dendritic cells, to the lymph nodes where an immune response is stimulated.

Page 16: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Immunity

Your skin and respiratory, digestive and circulatory systems are the first-line of defenses against pathogens.

Your second-line defenses are specific and work against specific pathogens.

Page 17: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Second-line of defense

White blood cellsInflammationSpecific ImmunityMemory B CellsActive ImmunityVaccinationPassive Immunity

Page 18: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Diseases and disorders

Hypertension, or high blood pressure, occurs when a high force of blood presses against the artery walls over time.

Heart disease, or coronary artery disease, occurs when the blood vessels that supply oxygen to the heart narrow and stiffen.

Varicose veins are another common disease of the circulatory system that happens when veins in the legs twist, swell, and become painful

Page 19: The Circulatory System. The Body’s Delivery System Your body’s way to continuously supply oxygen and nutrients and a away to remove wastes. Cardiovascular

Careers

Cardiologists monitor, diagnose and treat heart conditions through a variety of non-surgical means, including medications and management of lifestyle factors.

Echocardiography technicians perform ultrasounds of the heart and are trained to read the images.

Exercise physiologists look at the body's physical response to exercise, and in the field of cardiology they may work in a rehab program or in a cardiac catheterization lab. They perform stress test and EKG’s.