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1. The heart is a double pump Arteries take blood away from the heart while veins take blood to the heart. The right (left as you look at the diagram, right in real life) takes deoxygenated blood to the heart, while the left takes oxygenated blood around the body. 2. Arteries carry blood at high pressure 3. As a rule arteries carry oxygenated blood while veins carry deoxygenated blood. However, the pulmonary vein and artery break this rule and carry the opposite type of blood. 4. The arteries split off into thousands of tiny capillaries and take blood to every cell 5. The veins transport the deoxygenated blood at low pressure back to the heart.
The heart is made to pump by little pulses of electricity from the wall of the right atrium
Blood Vessels
Pressure Artery High Vein Low Capillaries Low large compared to whole size, but tiny because capillaries are very small Both Walls are 1 cell thick to allow substances to pass over
Lumen size
large
Oxygenated
Deoxygenated There are valves which stop the blood flowing the wrong way Same as artery (labelling)
Picture
The heart
In the heart the valves are to prevent the backflow of blood (See hand drawn diagram for more information). The heart pumps in three stages:
2. The atria gently push the blood into the ventricles (the sphincter muscles which let the blood into the atria from the vena cava and pulmonary vein close to stop blood flowing back out). 3. The ventricle contracts pushing blood around the aorta and pulmonary artery. The valves stop backflow NB The left side of the heart has a thick muscular wall because it needs to pump blood around the whole body
Blood
Red blood cell White blood cells They defend the body against disease Phagocytes Eat germs, therefore they are large and change shape. Lymph cells Identifies the germs with its huge brain (nucleus) and sends out antibodies. Plasma Platelets
They carry oxygen around the body They have a donut shape to maximize surface area. They also contains a lot of haemoglobin which when combines with oxygen is red, and which has a lot of iron. When it is combined with carbon dioxide it combines with water to form weak carbonic acid. Around 70% of the carbon dioxide leaks out of the cell into the plasma. Carbon monoxide combines with haemoglobin 300* more readily, and this time it does mix with the haemoglobin to form carboxyhaemoglobin, thus no oxygen can bond and the cell is useless. They are made by the bone marrow (anaemia = not enough blood or iron). They have no nucleus for more room
Is pale and straw coloured, and carries Blood cells and platelets, nutrients (e.g. glucose or amino acids) Carbon dioxide, Urea, Hormones
They are fragments of cells, and therefore contain no nucleus. They stop blood pouring out, and microorganisms getting in.
Germs contain antigens, and lymphocytes identify the germs by the antigens
Plasma proteins
y y
Albumen Makes the blood viscous Globulin Is created by the lymph cells for destroying germs, and certain types are needed for blood clotting
After the platelets have done their bit the fibrinogen is made into a mesh of solid fibres called fibrin. To stop blood clotting in our body we have anticoagulants (NOTE Old red blood cells are broken down by the liver after about four months when they become in effective) and the haemoglobin added to bile)