Its main job is to get food and oxygen to every cell in the body as well as carrying waste products to where they can be removed from the body.
Humans have a double circulatory
system - 2 circuits joined together
1st one pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs
to take in oxygen which then returns to the heart
2nd one pumps oxygenated blood around to all the
other organs, blood gives up its oxygen at the body
cells & the deoxygenated blood returns to the heart
The heart
Pumping organ that keeps blood
flowing around body - walls
mostly made of muscle tissue
Has valves to make sure blood goes
in right direction - not backwards
How the blood flows through the heart:
1) Blood flows into 2 atria from vena cava (from body) & pulmonary vein (from lungs)
2) Atria contract - pushing blood into ventricles
3) Ventricles contract - forcing blood into pulmonary
artery (to lungs) & aorta (to body) and out of heart
4) Blood flows to organs through arteries & return through veins
5) Atria fill again & cycle starts over
Blood vessels
Arteries - carry blood
away from heart
Heart pumps blood out
at high pressure so walls
are strong & eleastic
Walls are thick compared to size of lumen - contain thick layers
of muscle & elastic fibres to allow them to stretch & spring back
Capillaries - involved in
exchange of materials at tissues
Arteries branch into capillaries
Really tiny - carry blood close to every cell
in body to exchange substances with them
Have permeable walls - substances can diffuse in & out
Supply food & oxygen & take away waste
Walls are one cell thick -
decreases diffusion distance
Veins - carry blood to the heart
Capillaries join up to form veins
Blood is at lower pressure so walls
don't need to be as thick as artery walls
Have a bigger lumen to help
blood flow despite lower pressure
Have valves to keep blood flowing in right direction
The blood - a tissue containing:
Red blood cells
Carry oxygen
from lungs to cells
Have a concave shape to give
large SA for absorbing oxygen
Don't have a nucleus - more room for oxygen
Contain haemoglobin - in lungs, haemoglobin
combines with oxygen to become oxyhaemoglobin,
in body tissues, oxyhaemoglobin splits into
haemosglobin & oxygen to release oxygen to cells
White blood cells
Can change shape to
engulf microorganisms
Produce antibodies to fight
microorganisms as well as
antitoxins to neutralise toxins
produced by microorganisms
Do have a nucleus
Platelets
Small fragments of cells - have no nucleus
Help blood to clot at wound - stop blood
coming out/microorganisms getting in
Lack of platelets = excessive bleeding & bruising
Plasma
Pale straw-coloured liquid which
carries everything in blood
It carries:
RBC, WBC & platelets
Soluble products of
digestion (from gut to cells)
e.g. glucose & amino acids
Carbon dioxide (from organs to lungs)
Urea (from liver to kidneys)
Hormones
Antibodies/antitoxins
Circulation aids
Artificial blood
When someone loses a lot of blood -
heart can still pump remaining RBC
(as long as volume can be topped up)
Blood substitute - a salt solution
(saline) which can replace lost volume
Advantages: It's safe (if no air bubbles get in) & can
keep people alive - may give patient enough time to
produce new RBC otherwise...blood transfusion
Ideally, artificial blood product would replace function of RBC (no need
for blood transfusion) - being developed, problems with side effects
Artificial hearts & valves
Artificial hearts
Mechanical devices put into person to pump blood if own heart
fails - usually temporary fix (to keep person alive until donor heart
is found), can be permanent fix (reduces need for donor heart)
Advantage: not rejected because they are
made from metals/plastics (body doesn't
recognise them as foreign & attack)
Disadvantages: surgery to fit artificial heart can lead to
bleeding/infection, don't work as well as healthy natural one (parts
could wear out/motor could fail), blood doesn't flow through as
smoothly (can cause blood clots/strokes) - patient has to take drugs
to thin blood (can cause problems with bleeding if hurt in accident)
Artificial valves
If heart valves are defective - can
be replaced with mechanical valves
Much less drastic procedure than
heart transplant - but still major
surgery & problems with blood clots
Stents
Coronary heart disease - when arteries that supply blood to muscle of heart get blocked by fatty
deposits, causes arteries to become narrow, restricting blood flow which can result in heart attack
Stents are tubes that are inserted into arteries to keep them open - making
sure blood can pass through to heart muscles, keeps person's heart beating
Advantage: way of lowering risk of heart
attack in people with coronary heart disease
Disadvantages: over time, artery can narrow again -
stents can irritate artery & make scar tissue grow,
patient has to take drugs to stop blood clotting on stent