ch. 1- Circulation and Immunity

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Transcript ch. 1- Circulation and Immunity

Circulation and Immunity
Science 30
the heart
virtual heart
1.1) Circulatory System
• 4 main roles of the circulatory system:
– Transportation (gases, nutrients, wastes).
– Regulation (by hormones).
– Protection/Defense (immunity and injury).
– Distributes body heat.
• Divided into 2 parts:
– 1. Cardiovascular system (heart, blood
vessels).
– 2. Lymphatic system ( lymph vessels and
nodes).
Ideas about the heart
• Historical ideas:
– Galen: Greek physician (2nd century)
• Believed that heart sucked blood from veins, blood
flowed like the tides.
– Leonardo da Vinci: 15th century
• Complete and realistic sketches of the heart.
– William Harvey: 17th century
• Discovered valves in heart and veins, 1 way
movement of blood.
• Calculated cardiac output.
• Aided by Malpighi’s discovery of capillaries.
A. Cardiac Output
•
•
The amount of blood that flows from
each side of the heart per minute.
Two factors affect this output:
1. Stroke volume: quantity of blood pumped
with each beat of the heart (~ 70mL).
2. Heart rate: # of times heart beats/minute.
Cardiac output = stroke volume x HR.
Applications of Cardiac Output
Provides comparison for fitness levels:
- Low heart rate = high stroke volume.
- High heart rate = low stroke volume.
B) The heart
• There are 4 chambers in the heart:
– Left and Right atria (receive blood from lungs
and body).
– Left and Right ventricles (pump blood to
lungs and body).
• Double sided pump: Left and Right sides
of the heart are separated by a muscular
wall called the septum.
• The sac that encloses the heart =
pericardium. Fluid inside is called the
pericardial fluid.
Did you know that
your heart is the size
of your fist?
Descending aorta
chordae tendinae
(a.k.a. aortic valve)
(a.k.a pulmonary valve)
(a.k.a tricuspid)
(a.k.a bicuspid or mitral
valve)
septum
apex
1) The Heart Pumps
• There are 2 pumps that work
simultaneously; these are synchronized.
• Left pump = oxygenated blood received.
• Right pump = deoxygenated blood
received.
heart
2) Blood Flow- Low oxygen
• Blood low in oxygen (from the body)
enters the right atrium and is pumped to
the right ventricle.
• The right ventricle pumps deoxygenated
blood to the pulmonary arteries and then
to the lungs. This blood is then
oxygenated.
Blood flow- high oxygen
• Blood high in oxygen (from the lungs)
enters pulmonary veins to the left atrium.
• The left atrium pumps blood to the left
ventricle, pumped to the aorta, to the
arteries and then to the body.
• Arteries divide into arterioles and then into
capillaries. All gas, nutrient and waste
exchange happens using the capillaries.
Blood flow
• Capillaries branch into venules, becoming
veins, then the vena cava and blood
enters the right atrium.
• Why is the left ventricle (8-10mm)
thicker than the right( 2-3 mm) ?
blood flow
Vena Cava
The largest vein in the body. There are 2
branches of the vena cava:
1. Superior Vena Cava (receives blood from the
diaphragm up).
2. Inferior Vena Cava (receives blood from
below the diaphragm).
3) Heart Valves
• Valves open and close to let the blood flow
through the heart.
• 2 types:
– Atrioventricular (AV) valves: between atria
and ventricles.
• Open when atria contract, close when ventricles
contract.
– Semilunar: between ventricles and arteries.
• Open when ventricles contract, close when atria
contract.
HeartValves
virtual heart
4) Heartbeat
• “lub-dub” sound caused by closing of
heart valves.
• “lub”= AV valves close (ventricles contract)
• “dub”= Semi lunar valves close (atria
contract).
• “gurgle” = heart murmur (valves do not
close properly).
• Diastole = ventricular relaxation (“dub”).
• Systole = Ventricular contraction (“lub”).
heart murmur
Ventricles Contract
Ventricles relaxed
Heart Beat
5) Factors affecting heart rate
• Many factors affect heart rate including:
– Fear/Adrenaline.
– Temperature change (↑ temp = ↑ HR).
– Cardiovascular exercise (running, swimming,
cycling) can decrease heart rate.
• A stronger heart is NOT a larger heart but
a more elastic/efficient one!
6) Target Heart rate
• Once your body reaches 85% of its max. HR,
lactic acid is made and pain increases.
• To calculate target HR, use:
220 - age = target HR
Target Heart Rates
Health goal
% of maximum HR
Maintain fitness level
50 -60%
Increase fat burning
60-70%
Increase cardio
70-80%
1.2) Blood Vessels
•
3 types of blood vessels in the body:
1. Artery: take blood away from the heart.
1. Thick elastic walls that can stretch.
2. Vein: takes blood to the heart.
1. Thin walled with valves for 1 way flow.
3. Capillaries: connect arteries and veins.
1. 1 cell thick to allow diffusion into cells.
Arteries and Veins
1)Blood pathway in vessels
• Heart --- arteries ---- arterioles ---- capillaries ---venules ---- veins ---- vena cava --- heart.
• Arterioles and venules are just smaller versions
of arteries and veins.
• Arteries always carry oxygen rich blood (except
for pulmonary artery).
• Veins always carry oxygen poor blood (except for
pulmonary vein).
• Pressure drops as you get to the capillaries;
builds going back to the heart.
bruises
2) Varicose veins
• Raised veins due to damaged valves and
stretched walls.
• Blood pools and bunches veins.
• Prolonged standing can cause this.
3) Blood Pressure (BP)
• The force of blood against the artery walls
during ventricular contraction (systole) and
during atrial contraction ( diastole).
Heart rate = Systole/Diastole
= 120/80 (average)
• Diastole is most important because it
determines the pressure on arteries when
ventricles are relaxed.
• Measured using a sphygmomanometer.
a) Factors that affect BP
1.
2.
3.
4.
Heart rate (HR): High HR = high BP.
Blood vessel size: narrower = high BP.
Blood volume: High volume = high BP.
Stroke volume: High volume = high BP.
b) Regulation of Blood Pressure
(BP)
• Low BP = difficulty transporting blood to
tissues (especially head).
• High BP = weaken artery, ruptures blood
vessels.
• Baroreceptors (in aorta and carotid
arteries) detect changes in BP. Brain
receives message and either speeds up
(sympathetic) or slows down
(parasympathetic) impulses.
c) Hypertension: The Silent Killer
High blood pressure
Caused by increased resistance to blood flow
Blood vessels weaken and may rupture
Body compensates by increasing support
provided by connective tissues
 Arteries become hard
During systole, blood pressure increases even more
 Further stress and weakening
Causes of Hypertension
1. Hereditary
2. Diet
 Excess salt
 High fat
 Silent killer
 Symptoms not noticeable until a heart attack or
stroke results
d) Pressure and Blood flow
• As the area that blood flows through
increases, the pressure drops (because
velocity does too).
• Blood travels the slowest through the
capillaries; allows for all nutrients to be
picked up!
• Velocity of blood decreases from arteries -- capillaries --- veins.
1.3) Blood
•
•
•
•
Average 70kg person has 5L of blood.
55% of blood is fluid,45% is blood cells.
Plasma = fluid; 90% water and 10%
proteins, vitamins, glucose...
There are 3 groups of proteins in plasma:
1. Albumins: draws water back into capillaries
2. Globulins: produces antibodies
3. Fibrinogens: used to clot blood.
A. Red Blood cells (erythrocytes)
• Make up 99% of blood cells.
• Main function = transport oxygen (each rbc
can have 4 oxygen molecules).
• Respiratory pigment hemoglobin allows
rbc’s to carry oxygen ( 70x more than
without hemoglobin)- gives red color!
• Without hemoglobin, life can be
maintained for 4.5s; with = 5 minutes.
•biconcave shape to maximize SA for gas
exchange.
•Enucleated = no nucleus when mature,
allows for more oxygen to be carried. Bone
marrow produces rbc’s, can not reproduce
without a nucleus.
Bone marrow
• Erythropoiesis = rbc production ( occurs in
bone marrow).
• Rbc’s begin as stem cells, divide and shrinklosing nucleus.
• Age of rbc’s is monitored by wbc’s; when rbc is
120 days, it releases hemoglobin and is
transported from the cell.
• Iron (globin) is recycled and used in new rbc’s;
heme is converted into bile pigments (bilirubin).
B. White blood cells (Leukocytes)
• Around 1% of blood.
• Responsible for:
housekeeping/ defence.
• Have a nucleus.
• Made in bone marrow; last
13- 20 days.
• Destroy invaders by:
– Phagocytosis: move towards
microbe. Enzymes released
digest leukocyte and microbe;
fragments = pus.
C. Platelets (thrombocytes)
• Have no nucleus.
• Produced in bone marrow; last 5-9 days.
• Irregularly shaped, very fragile and
responsible for blood-clotting reactions.
blood
D. Blood Clotting
• Maintains homeostasis.
• Platelets break when striking a sharp
object .
• Fibrinogen breaks up into fibrin threads.
These seal the cut: prevent bacteria from
entering and create a framework for wbc’s
to patch up cut.
• A thrombus is a blood clot that seals the
vessel = blocks vessel and prevents gas
exchange.
• 2 types:
– Cerebral: clot in brain, causes a stroke.
– Coronary: clot in artery, causes heart attack.
• Embolus = dislodged blood clot, travels to
other organs; life threatening
Blood Clotting Process
Hemophilia
The ability to produce
fibrinogen to form a clot is
hindered.
Czar Nicholas II son had
hemophilia.
1.4) Cardiovascular diseases and
disorders
• There are many diseases that affect the
heart and blood vessels:
– Atherosclerosis ( hardening of arteries due to
plaque).
– Coronary Heart disease ( restricted blood flow
to artery(s) of the heart).
– Heart Attack ( no blood flow to coronary artery).
– Stroke (no blood flow to brain).
– Aneurysm ( bulging of artery or vein).
– Septal Defect ( septum is not completely
closed- “hole in the heart”).
a) Plaque and cholesterol
• Cholesterol that is deposited on the artery
is called plaque.
• LDL fats are “bad” because they build up
in the artery (found in saturated fats).
• HDL’s are “good” because they take LDL’s
away to the liver (found in fish, etc).
b) Atherosclerosis
c) Problems with the heart
• Angina = chest pains that occur when too
little oxygen from the coronary arteries
reach the heart.
• Treatment:
– Drugs to reduce plaque in arteries.
– Coronary bypass surgery (used in severe
cases, grafts a new vein to the heart around
the blockage). Heart must be stopped to do
this!
Coronary Artery
coronary heart bypass surgery
What are
these?
Tapeworms,
influenza and
HIV.
Syphilis and Elephantitis
1.5) Immune system
• Pathogens (an agent that causes disease)
enter the body in many ways:
– Protozoans (parasites): example – malaria.
– Fungi ( mold, etc): example – athlete’s foot.
– Bacteria (rapidly reproduce; stopped by
antibodies): example – tetanus.
– Viruses (infect host cell and reproduce DNA):
example- HIV, cold virus.
Viruses
1) Immune response
• 2 lines of defence:
– 1st line = primarily physical (skin, mucous).
– 2nd line = within the body (antibodies
produced).
• 1st line: Non-specific Immunity
– Barriers: skin mucous, cilia.
– Phagocytosis: wbc’s engulf the foreign
invader (packman)- releases pus.
– Fever: raises body temperature to 40°
destroy bacteria (at 43° all cells die).
Immunity game
a. 1st line : Physical
 Mainly physical
 Skin – protective
Acidic secretions (pH of 3 – 5)
 Respiratory tract (windpipe) – mucus and cilia sweep
foreign material away from lung
 Stomach – acids and protein digesting enzymes
destroy microbes
 Tears, saliva, mucous secretions – lysozyme
(enzyme) destroys bacterial cell walls
immune system
b) 2nd line: specific Immunity
• Lymphocytes: produced in bone marrow
and seed in lymph nodes.
• When a foreign antigen (protein) is present,
immune system responds. Foreign cell has
different antigen markers than body cells;
this initiates a response.
• Complement proteins (in plasma) activated
by foreign microbes, attach to invader and
help phagocytes.
• 2 Types: T and B cells.
a. B cells
• Formed and mature in the bone marrow.
• Each b cell produces a single type of
antibody.
• Plasma cells can produce up to 2000
antibody molecules/second.
• Recognize the foreign antigen and start
dividing into 2 groups:
1. Memory cells: provide life-time immunity.
2. Plasma cells: produce antibodies that stick
to antigen and disable the invader.
•
•
b. T cells
Formed in bone marrow, mature in
thymus gland.
Recognize foreign protein on cell
membrane and divides into 4 types:
1. Memory cells: Provide lifetime immunity.
2. Helper T cells: secrete cytokines that
activate B cells and Killer T-cells.
3. Killer T cells: cytotoxic cells = destroy any
infected body cells; destroy mutated cells.
Responsible for rejection of organs
(transplantation).
4. Suppressor T cells: shuts down immune
response.
B cells
Immune response
T cells
c. Antibodies
• Y shaped proteins that target foreign
invaders.
• Specific to the antigen on the invader.
• Each antibody has a complementary
shape to it’s antigen; each antibody will
only attach to a specific site.
• Larger molecule is then engulfed by
macrophage (phagocytotic wbc’s).
• Invaders can’t access the cells and can’t
pass through cell membrane- await death.
• Body contains 100 000 different antibodies
cell wars
Immune response
• Bacteria enters----macrophage attacks ----helper
T cells release lymphokine ---- B cells activated-- antibodies released --- released into circulatory
system.
• B cells also activate killer T cells ---- puncture
cell membrane or attack cell membrane of
infected cell (by virus)--- kill cells.
• Once foreign cells destroyed suppressor T-cell
stops immune response---- body maintains
antibodies to kill antigen--- phagocytes clean
debris and tissues repair.
2) Vaccinations
• Memory T cells can provide immunity to
viruses; you never get sick from the same
1 twice.
• Vaccinations are a dead/weakened strain
of the virus injected, antibodies are
produced and immunity is created.
Immunization
Polio virus
Rabies Virus
Smallpox virus
3) Autoimmune Disorders
Immune system mistakenly attacks body cells
Renegade lymphocytes treat body’s cells as foreign and
attack cells (Usually held in check)
Mutated T and B cells
Theory: suppressors secrete a substance that tells
macrophage to engulf renegade cells
Examples: Lupus, MS, Type 1 diabetes, AIDS.
AIDS
Causes
Weakening of suppressor T cells:
Drugs or serious infections
Decline with age
Some people are born with defective
suppressor T cells
Treatment
Immune suppressing drugs
Reduce intensity of renegade cells
allergic reaction