Lecture 7a and 7b
Lecture 7a and 7b
and CO2)
Hormones (steroids and
thyroid hormone are
FUNCTIONS
carried by plasma
● Transport of: proteins)
○ Gases, nutrients, waste products
○ Processed molecules PLASMA
○ Regulatory molecules ● 90% water
● Regulation of pH and osmosis ● Colloid - liquid containing suspended
● Maintenance of body temperature substances that don’t settle out
● Protection against foreign substances ● Includes many dissolved substances
● Clot formation ○ Nutrients
○ Salts (electrolytes)
○ Respiratory gases
COMPONENTS
○ Hormones
● Blood is the only fluid tissue a type of ○ Plasma proteins
connective tissue, in the human body ○ Waste products
● Components of blood ● Most abundant solutes in plasma
○ Formed elements (living cells ● Most are made by the liver
○ Plasma (nonliving fluid matrix) ● Includes:
○ Albumin - an important blood
buffer and contributes to osmotic
pressure
○ Clotting proteins - reduce blood
loss when a blood vessel in injured
○ Antibodies - help protect the body
from pathogens
● Blood composition varies as cells
exchange substances with the blood
○ Liver makes more proteins when
levels drop
○ Respiratory and urinary systems
restore blood pH to normal when
blood becomes too acidic or
alkaline
PLASMA (55%)
● Plasma helps distribute body heat
Water 90% of plasma volume;
solvent for carrying other
substances; absorbs heat
FORMED ELEMENTS (CELLS) (45%)
Salts (electrolytes) Osmotic balance, pH Erythrocytes • 4-6 million per mm3 of blood
buffering, regulation of (RBC) • Transports oxygen and help
membrane permeability transport carbon dioxide
● Sodium
● Potassium
● Calcium
● Magnesium Leukocytes • 4,800-10,800 per mm3 of
● Chloride (WBC) blood
● Bicarbonate • Defense and immunity
Monocyte
THROMBOCYTES (platelets)
● Cell fragments of megakaryocytes
● Needed for the clotting process
● Normal platelet count: 300,000 platelets
per mm3 of blood
HEMATOPOIESIS
● Blood cell formation
● Occurs in red bone marrow (myeloid
tissue)
● All blood cells are derived from a common HEMOSTASIS
stem cell (hemocytoblast) ● Process of stopping the bleeding that
● Hemocytoblasts form two types of results from a break in a blood vessel
descendants ● Hemostasis involves three phase
○ Lymphoid stem cell, produces ○ Step 1: Vascular spasms
lymphocytes ■ Immediate response to
○ Myeloid stem cell, produce all other blood injury
formed elements ■ Vasoconstriction causes
blood vessel to spasm
ERYTHROPOIESIS ■ Spasms narrow the blood
● Production of red blood cells vessel, decreasing blood
● RBCs wear out in 100 to 120 days loss
○ Step 2: Platelet plug formation
■ Collagen fibers are exposed Disorders of Hemostasis:
by a break in a blood vessel ● Undesirable clotting
■ Platelets become “sticky” ○ Thrombus
and cling to fibers ■ A clot in an unbroken blood
■ Anchored platelets release vessel
chemicals to attract more ■ Can be deadly in areas such
platelets as the lungs
■ Platelets pile up to form a ○ Embolus
platelet plug (white ■ A thrombus that breaks
thrombus) away and floats freely in the
bloodstream
■ Can later clog vessels in
critical areas such as the
brain
● Bleeding disorders
○ Thrombocytopenia
■ Insufficient number of
circulating platelets
■ Arises from any condition
that suppresses the bone
marrow
○ Coagulation (blood clotting) ■ Even normal movements
■ Injured tissues release can cause bleeding from
tissue factor (TF) small blood vessels that
■ PF3 (a phospholipid) require platelets for clotting
interacts with TF, blood ■ Evidenced by petechiae
protein clotting factors, and (small purplish blotches on
calcium ions to trigger a the skin)
clotting cascade ○ Hemophilia
■ Prothrombin activator ■ Hereditary bleeding disorder
converts prothrombin to ■ Normal clotting factors are
thrombin (an enzyme) missing
■ Thrombin joins fibrinogen ■ Minor tissue damage can
proteins into hairlike cause life-threatening
molecules of insoluble prolonged bleeding
fibrin
● Forms a meshwork
(the basis for a clot)
■ Normal clotting time = 3-6
minutes
Lecture 7b: Cardiovascular System
CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEM
● Systemic circulation
○ BLOOD flows from LEFT side of the
heart through the body tissues and
BACK to the RIGHT side of the
heart
● Pulmonary circulation
○ BLOOD flows from the RIGHT side
of the heart to the lungs and back
to the LEFT side of the heart
● Heart block
○ Damaged AV node releases them
from control of the SA node; result
is in a slower heart rate as
ventricles contract at their own
rate
● Ischemia
○ Lack of adequate oxygen supply to
heart muscle
● Fibrillation
○ A rapid, uncoordinated shuddering
of the heart muscle
● Tachycardia
○ Rapid heart rate over 100 beats
per minute
● Bradycardia
○ Slow heart rate less than 60 beats
per minutes
HEART CONTRACTIONS
● Once SA node starts the heartbeat
○ Impulse spreads to the AV node
○ Then the atria contract
● At the AV node, the impulse passes
through the AV bundle, bundle branches,
and Purkinje fibers
● Blood is ejected from the ventricles to the
aorta and pulmonary trunk as the
ventricles contract
Homeostatic imbalance:
THE HEART: CARDIAC OUTPUT BLOOD VESSELS: THE VASCULAR SYSTEM
● Cardiac output (CO) ● Transport blood to the tissue and back
○ Amount of blood pumped by each ○ Carry blood away from the heart
side (ventricle) of the heart in one ■ Arteries
minute ■ Arterioles
● Stroke volume (SV) ○ Exchanges between tissues and
○ Volume of blood pumped by each blood
ventricle in one contraction (each ■ Capillary beds
heartbeat) ○ Return blood toward the heart
○ Usually remains relatively constant ■ Venules
○ About 70mL of blood is pumped ■ Veins
out of the left ventricle with each
heartbeat
● Heart rate (HR)
○ Typically 75 beats per minute
CO = HR x SV
CO = HR(75 beats/min) x SV(70 mL/beat)
CO = 5250 mL/min
BLOOD PRESSURE
● Measurements by health professionals are
made on the pressure in large arteries
○ Systolic - pressure at the peak of
ventricular contraction
○ Diastolic - pressure when
ventricles relax
○ Write systolic pressure first and
diastolic last (120/80 mm Hg)
● Pressure in blood vessels decreases as
distance from the heart increases
- BUBAN -