Capillary Action and Blood Components
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Transcript Capillary Action and Blood Components
Capillary Action and
Blood Components
Biology 20
Unit D: Body Systems – Circulation
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Remember….
Capillaries are so small that blood cells
can only pass through single file
Important because they are the only vessels
THIN enough for diffusion of nutrients, wastes,
and gases
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Network
Capillaries work in
NETWORKS or
BEDS throughout
body
Bed is formed
between a branch of
an artery and a
branch of a vein
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Precapillary Sphincters
Blood flow not always constant in capillaries
If cells beside certain capillaries don’t
need to be serviced by the blood, blood
flow can be stopped from going to that
capillary
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Precapillary Sphincters Con’t
Done by PRECAPILLARY
SPHINCTERS that
contract and close the
opening to that specific
capillary
Blood then passes right
from artery to vein
through main capillary
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When do the these sphincters constrict
blood flow?
After eating
Capillaries feeding certain muscles are closed
All the capillaries of the digestive system are
open
Ie) capillaries in villi of small intestine
While exercising
Capillaries feeding muscles are open, and the
some capillaries feeding the digestive system
would be closed
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Interstitial Fluid
Liquid that surrounds body
cells and capillaries
Material exchanged
between body cells and
capillaries must travel
through this fluid
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Sections of Capillaries
Arterial end
Blood is bright red because hemoglobin in red
blood cells contain lots of oxygen
Mid-section
Where diffusion of materials takes place
Direction of diffusion decided by a material’s
concentration gradient
Venous end
Blood is blue looking because there is minimal
oxygen present and lots of carbon dioxide
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Blood Flow Speed in Capillaries
Slower than any other part of system
Allows time for diffusion of materials
Pressure is lower than arteries, but still
more than veins
Ensures blood keeps moving
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Blood Components
2 main elements: fluid and solid portions
PLASMA = fluid portion
FORMED PORTION = solid portion
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Plasma
Consists of water, dissolved gas, proteins, sugars,
vitamins, minerals, hormones, and waste products
55% of blood volume
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Formed Portion
Consists of:
red blood cells
white blood cells
platelets
All produced in bone
marrow
45% of blood volume
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Red Blood Cells (RBC)
Aka Erythrocytes
~44% of the total volume of
blood
Specialized for O2 transport
The O2 carrying capacity of blood is
based on # of RBC present and the
amount of HEMOGLOBIN on each
Mature RBC has no nucleus
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Hemoglobin
Each RBC contains ~280 million
Iron-containing
Allows large sums of O2 to be transported in
blood
Special properties that let it chemically bind with O2
Then releases O2 by diffusion to cells that need it
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Hemoglobin Con’t
After CO2 (waste) is diffused into the blood, it enters
the RBC where a small amount is chemically binded
to hemoglobin
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Anemia
Disorder that occurs when there are:
too few RBC
OR
too little hemoglobin inside the RBC in blood
These deficiencies reduce the amount of O2 that is
flowing through body
May be caused by not eating enough iron (mineral)
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White Blood Cells (WBC)
AKA Leucocytes
Apart of body’s response to infection
~1% of total blood volume (X2) when fighting
infection
Colorless and have a nuclei
Divided into 3 groups:
Granulocytes
Monocytes
Lymphocytes
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1. Granulocytes
Consist of:
Neutrophils
Basophils
Eosinophils
Typically found circulating in blood with
granulocytes engulfing foreign bodies
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2. Monocytes
Can leave bloodstream and
become further specialized into
MACROPHAGES (destroy
bacteria – engulf it)
Typically found circulating in
blood with granulocytes engulfing
foreign bodies
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3. Lymphocytes
Some produce
ANTIBODIES
Proteins that
incapacitate pathogens
and allow them to be
easily detected and
destroyed
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Platelets
Pieces of cells that form when
larger cells in the bone
marrow break apart
No nucleus
Breaks down quickly in blood
Play key role in blood clotting
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Stages of Clotting
1. Blood vessel broken due to injury
2. Substances released at site to attract
platelets
3. Platelets at site rupture, releasing chemicals
that combine with blood components to
produce enzyme called
THROMBOPLASTIN
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Clotting Con’t
4. As long as there is Ca+ present,
THROMBOPLASTIN will react with
PROTHROMBIN to produce THROMBIN
Prothrombin is a plasma protein produced in liver
5. THROMBIN (enzyme) reacts with
FIBRINOGEN (protein) to produce FIBRIN
6. FIBRIN forms mesh strands around injured
area, thus preventing more blood loss
Forms clot
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Plasma
Fluid portion of blood
Carries all blood cells
Is a mixture:
92% water
7% Blood Proteins
0.1% Organic Substances (ie.urea)
0.9% Inorganic Ions (sodium, chlorine, magnesium,
potassium, calcium, biocarbonates, phosphates, etc)
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Plasma Con’t
CO2 is dissolved in the water portion of
plasma when transported in the blood
Forms carbonic acid in cytoplasm of RBC
Then diffuses out of RBC into the plasma as
bicarbonate ions and is carried from tissues to
the lungs for gas exchange
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