Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system) 2/ Blood vessels 3/ Vasoconstriction and vasodilation.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Cardiovascular System
Advertisements

Arteries and Veins. Learning Outcomes Arteries have an outer layer of connective tissue containing elastic fibres and a middle layer containing smooth.
BLOOD VESSELS (ARTERIES, VEINS AND CAPILLARIES). The Circulatory System is known as a CLOSED SYSTEM because the blood is contained within either the heart.
Circulatory System The circulation system supplies oxygen and nutrients to tissues round the body and carries away wastes.
The Blood Vessels Roadways of the Body.
Circulatory System of a Mammal
What you will learn about in this topic: 1.What blood vessels are and what they do 2.Arteries 3.Veins 4.Capillaries Blood vessels 2.
 If you could join all the blood vessels in your body in a straight line, it would be about 100,000km long!  Our blood vessels are not one long tube.
The Cardiovascular System. Learning Outcomes Blood circulates from the heart through the arteries to the capillaries to the veins and back to the heart.
Blood Vessels and the Heart
Blood vessels Arteries The blood from the heart is carried through the body by a complex network of blood vessels Arteries take blood away from.
Blood vessels.
UNIT 9- Circulatory, Respiratory and Endocrine Systems.
ACCESS HE Human Biology.
blood from the heart gets around the body through blood vessels
CIRCULATORY SYSTEM THE HEART AND BLOOD VESSELS.
Year 10 GCSE Body Systems..
Topic 6.2 The Transport System
The Circulatory System Getting oxygen and nutrients where they need to be!
S. MORRIS Main functions: 1.Transports gases (from the respiratory system), nutrient molecules and waste materials (from the digestive system) 2.Regulates.
carry blood away from heart usually O 2 rich Pulmonary artery – artery leading from heart to lung (deoxygenated) connective tissue and muscle walls elastic.
Felicia Klarin Stephenie. Circulatory System Components of the Circulatory System 1. Heart 2. Arteries 3. Arterioles 4. Blood Capillaries 5. Venules.
THE CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
Cardiovascular system (CVS)
 Arteries  Capillaries  Veins. Muscular Walls.
Human Physiology Lesson 12c- Blood Vessels
The Circulatory System
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Tidbits  your blood vessels are hollow tubes that circulate your blood  If.
Blood Vessels. Our Goals Today... Explain the difference between the five types of blood vessels. – Arteries, Veins, Arterioles, Venules and Capillaries.
Unit 1&2 Anatomy and physiology
Multicellular organisms need transport systems to deal with surface area to volume ratio issue. Animal transport and exchange systems In mammals, nutrients,
Part 3: Blood Vessels function structure -location
Transport in Animals. Open or closed circulatory system Open e.g. insects Closed, e.g. Mammals, earthworms.
Chapter 26: The human circulatory system Leaving Certificate Biology Higher Level.
Circulation. The circulatory system acts as a transportation network for our cells and tissues It supplies nutrients and removes wastes It is km.
Circulatory System Consists of… Blood Vessels Blood Heart.
The Circulatory System: Blood Vessels. 3 types of blood vessels Arteries  carry blood AWAY from heart (reminder tip: think “A” for Away) Veins  carry.
 Functions  Transport system nutrients from digested food  all body cells oxygen from the lungs  all body cells metabolic wastes (CO 2 )  organs.
Circulation and Gas Exchange Intermediate 2 Biology Unit 3 ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY.
Blood Vessel Notes. Arteries Carry blood away from the heart Thick walls- carry fast and furious rush of blood Elastic Very smooth- to help prevent clots.
Blood Vessels Arteries, Veins and Capillaries (Arterioles and Venules)
Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system) 2/ Blood vessels 3/ Vasoconstriction and vasodilation.
Heart and circulation ECG and Blood vessels. The ECG trace for each heartbeat displays a P wave, a QRS wave or complex and a T wave Q R S P wave T wave.
Circulatory system.
Higher Human Biology Subtopic 13 Circulatory system
Unit 2b: The Cardiovascular System
Circulatory System.
THE HEART LUNGS: Gas exchange
Circulation and Respiration
Growth and Development of different organisms
The cardiovascular system, diabetes and obesity
Blood Vessels Compare the structure and function of blood vessels. (GLOs: D1, E1) Examples: diameter, elasticity, muscle layers, valves, what they transport.
Blood Vessels and their Functions
Circulatory System of a Mammal
How Blood Moves as it Travels Through the Body
Mr Muddle! Read these ... Think of some categories
The Circulatory System
Circulatory System Blood Vessels.
Higher Human Biology Unit 2: Physiology and Health
Heart: valves, vessels and nodal tissue
Cardiovascular System
Cardiovascular System What do you know already?
Circulation and Gas Exchange
Unit J. Circulation and Blood .
Blood Vessels.
BLOOD VESSELS.
Bell work 1/10/13 Which parts of the heart pump blood into the…
Presentation transcript:

Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system) 2/ Blood vessels 3/ Vasoconstriction and vasodilation

Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system)

Vena cava Pulmonary artery Pulmonary vein Aorta

Right atrium Right ventricleLeft ventricle Left atrium

Right Atrio-Ventricular valve AV valve Semi-lunar valves Left Atrio- Ventricular valve AV valve

Aorta Pulmonary vein Carotid artery Coronary artery Hepatic artery Renal artery Portal vein Renal vein Hepatic vein Vena cava Jugular vein Pulmonary artery

What is the function of arteries? Arteries take the blood Away from the heart, What is the function of veins? Veins have Valves What happens as the blood moves away from the heart? A decrease in blood pressure Why do we need a heart made of two pumps? One side restores blood pressure after the blood has passed in the tiny capillaries of the organ tissues. The other sides restores blood pressure after the blood has passed in the tiny capillaries of the lungs. What does oxygenated blood means? Blood which contains a higher concentration of oxygen than surrounding tissues. What does deoxygenated blood means? Blood which contains a low concentration of oxygen.

9K5Q

Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system) 2/ Blood vessels

2. What does the outer layer of connective tissue in arteries and veins contain? Elastic fibres 3. What is the importance of the elastic fibres in arteries? They enable the walls of the artery to pulsate (stretch and recoil) to accommodate surges in blood. 4. How does the muscular wall of veins compare with that of arteries? It is thinner 5. What is the function of the valves found in veins? Prevent back flow of blood 6. What is the function of capillaries? Allow exchange of substances between the blood and living tissues.

Arteries carry blood away from the heart Arteries have an outer layer of connective tissue containing elastic fibres and a middle layer containing smooth muscle with more elastic fibres. The elastic walls of the arteries stretch and recoil to accommodate the surge of blood after each contraction of the heart. The smooth muscle in the walls of arterioles (small arteries) can contract or relax causing vasoconstriction or vasodilation to control blood flow. During strenuous exercise arterioles leading to working muscles vasodilate increasing blood flow. At the same time arterioles leading to abdominal organs vasocontract reducing blood flow. Veins carry the blood towards the heart. Veins have an outer layer of connective tissue containing elastic fibres. They have a much thinner muscular wall than arteries. Blood flows along veins at lower pressure than arteries. The lumen of a vein is wider than that of an artery. Valves are present in veins to prevent the back flow of blood. Capillaries merge together to form venules which again merge to form veins which carry the blood back to the heart. Capillaries form a dense network, they allow exchange of substances with tissues. They are only one cell thick so they allow quick and efficient exchange of materials.

Arteries carry blood away from the heart Arteries have an outer layer of connective tissue containing elastic fibres and a middle layer containing smooth muscle with more elastic fibres. The elastic walls of the arteries stretch and recoil to accommodate the surge of blood after each contraction of the heart. The smooth muscle in the walls of arterioles (small arteries) can contract or relax causing vasoconstriction or vasodilation to control blood flow. During strenuous exercise arterioles leading to working muscles vasodilate increasing blood flow. At the same time arterioles leading to abdominal organs vasocontract reducing blood flow. Veins carry the blood towards the heart. Veins have an outer layer of connective tissue containing elastic fibres. They have a much thinner muscular wall than arteries. Blood flows along veins at lower pressure than arteries. The lumen of a vein is wider than that of an artery. Valves are present in veins to prevent the back flow of blood. Capillaries merge together to form venules which again merge to form veins which carry the blood back to the heart. Capillaries form a dense network, they allow exchange of substances with tissues. They are only one cell thick so they allow quick and efficient exchange of materials. Arteries function? Arteries structure? Function of elastic fibres ? What is the effect of contraction or relaxation of smooth muscles in the walls of the arterioles? How do arterioles react to strenuous exercise? Function of veins? Structure of veins? How is a vein’s muscular wall compared to arteries? How is blood pressure in veins compared to arteries? How is the lumen of veins compared to arteries? What structure feature of veins is missing in arteries? What is its function? What are venules? Function of capillaries? Structure of capillaries and how It helps its function?

Circulatory system 1/ Blood flow (Heart and circulatory system) 2/ Blood vessels 3/ Vasoconstriction and vasodilation

The smooth muscle in the walls of arterioles (small arteries) can contract or relax causing vasoconstriction or vasodilation to control blood flow. This process allows changing demands of the body’s tissues to be met.

Give 2 examples of circumstances during which vasoconstriction and vasodilation take place and describe the pattern of dilation and contractions. During exercise Regulate body temperature

During exercise – During strenuous exercise arterioles leading to working muscles vasodilate increasing blood flow. – At the same time arterioles leading to abdominal organs vasocontract reducing blood flow. To regulate body temperature – When we are too hot, blood vessels supplying blood to the skin can swell or dilate (vasodilation). This allows more warm blood to flow near the surface of the skin, where the heat can be lost to the air. – When we are too cold the blood vessels supplying warm blood to the skin become narrow or constrict (vasoconstriction). This reduces the flow of warm blood near the surface of the skin, and reduces heat loss. – A very common mistake in exams is to write that the blood vessels move up and down in the skin. The blood vessels do not move during vasodilation and vasoconstriction.