Transcript ppt

Body Systems
Circulatory
Lymphatic &
Respiratory
Hierarchy of structure in Animals
The Human Body
• The human body is composed of many
systems
– Circulatory
– Respiratory
– Muscular
– Skeletal
– Lymphatic
– Excretory
- Immune
- Digestive
- Nervous
- Reproductive
- Endocrine
Function of The Circulatory System
-
Moves oxygen from the lungs to all the body
cells
Moves carbon dioxide from the body cells to
the lungs
Moves nutrients from the small intestine to
the body cells
Moves waste materials from the body cells to
the kidneys and skin
Main Parts of the Circulatory System
Heart – the pump
Blood – fluid in
which materials
are transported
Vessels – Tubes to
carry the blood
The Heart
• Did you know…
• Composed of cardiac
– Your circulatory system
muscle tissue, nerve
is about 60,000 miles
tissue and connective
long
tissue
– Your heart beats more
than 2.5 billion times
• Frequency of heart
in the average lifetime
beat depends on your
– the human heart
physical activity level
creates enough
and other factors
pressure when it
(stress, general health,
pumps out to the body
to squirt blood 30 feet.
etc)
The Blood
• Blood is a type of connective Did you know…
tissue that circulates through - It takes about
20 seconds for
your body, it consists of 4
a RBC to
components:
– Red Blood Cells (RBC)
– White Blood Cells (WBC)
– Platelets
– Plasma
circulate the
entire body
The Vessels
-
-
-
There are 3 types of blood vessels:
arteries, veins, and capillaries
Arteries carry blood away. Because
the heart generates a lot of pressure
when pumping blood through the
body the walls of the arteries are
thicker than the other vessels
Veins carry blood toward the heart.
arteries and veins are linked together
by capillaries
Capillaries is where the gas exchange
occurs. Oxygen from the lungs
diffuses from the blood to the
surrounding tissues and Co2 and
other wastes pass from the body to
the blood to be carried out for
disposal
Circulatory System
Path of Blood
•blood is collected in the atria via veins
•atria walls contract, blood is pumped from the atria
to the ventricles via opened atrio-ventricular
valves
•semi-lunar valves are closed to prevent blood from
flowing to arteries while the ventricle fills up with
blood
•ventricle walls contract, causing rise in blood
pressure
•high blood pressure cause atrio-ventricular valves
to close to prevent back flow of blood to atria
•high blood pressure also cause semi-lunar valves
to open to allow blood to be pumped from ventricles
to arteries
•as blood leaves ventricles, pressure inside the
ventricles drop and ventricles stop contracting
•the semi-lunar valves close to prevent back flow of
blood from arteries to ventricles
The Lymphatic System
Function of The Lymphatic System
• The lymphatic system aids the immune system in destroying
pathogens and filtering waste.
• To remove excess fluid, waste, debris, dead blood cells,
pathogens, cancer cells, and toxins from these cells and the
tissue spaces between them.
• The lymphatic system also works with the circulatory system
to deliver nutrients, oxygen, and hormones from the blood to
the cells that make up the tissues of the body.
Lymphatic System and Circulatory
System Working Together
• Lymph originates as plasma (fluid portion of
blood)
• Some of this plasma leaves blood stream and
flows into the surrounding tissues (called
interstitial fluid).
• Interstitial fluid delivers nutrients to the cells
and takes up cell waste
• 90 percent of this tissue fluid flows back
through the circulatory system, 10 percent of
the fluid is left behind and is now known
as lymph
• Lymphatic system is designed so lymph only
flows upwards (from the extremities), where it
is filtered through lymph nodes on its way
towards the neck where it re-enters the
bloodstream
Respiratory System
Main Parts of the Respiratory System
• Trachea
– Tube that takes air from the back of the throat
down to the lungs
• Bronchi (sing. bronchus)
– As the trachea approaches the lungs it splits into
two bronchi, one bronchus leads to each lung
• Alveoli (sing. alveolus)
– Tiny air sac surrounded by blood vessels
– Lungs contain millions of these
– Where gas exchange occurs
Gas Exchange
• O2 and CO2 have only to
diffuse through 2 thin
walls: capillaries and
alveoli
• O2 that we breathe in
diffuses from the alveoli
into the blood stream
and CO2 leaves the
blood stream through
the alveoli and the air
we breathe out
Gas Exchange
• Alveoli are tiny sacs that fill with air to
allow diffusion of gas
• Many (millions of) alveoli provide a large
total surface area for greater absorption
• A thin, single layer of flattened cells are on the wall of each alveolus to
decrease the distance that gases need to diffuse across
• A dense network of capillaries (tiny blood vessels) surrounding the
alveolus to remove CO2 from brought into from rest of body and to
transport O2 to rest of the body
– Hemoglobin, the protein found in red blood cells, pick up O2
from the alveoli to transport to the rest of the body
Breathing
• Involves the diaphragm (a
large sheet of muscle
underneath the lungs) and
the muscles between the
ribs.
• Is an involuntary process
that we can override while
talking but only temporarily.
• It is controlled by a part of
the human brain that
detects the concentration of
CO2 in our blood
Air Pathway
•
•
air enters through the nostrils (air is filtered by nose hair)
↓
nasal cavity (air is warmed, humidified, and sampled for odors)
↓
pharynx
↓
larynx
↓
trachea (aka windpipe)
↓
bronchi (there are 2, each leads to 1 lung)
↓
bronchioles
↓
alveoli (clusters of air sacs with very large surface area, surrounded by capillaries),
oxygenated blood moves towards the heart, via the pulmonary vein and gets
pumped into the left atrium
Class/Homework
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
•
What is the system that aids in the destruction of pathogens from the
bloodstream?
What system does the lymphatic system work with to access the lymph
nodes?
Do lymph nodes regenerate?
What occurs as you inhale?
What is the muscle that contracts and shortens upon breathing?
Explain how diffusion is involved in gas exchange.
What are the three main parts of the respiratory system and what is
there function?
Questions (Nelson Text book)
– Pg 87 #1,2,5-7
– Pg 95 #1-4