Circulatory System definition
- 3 components of circulatory system
-Moved by generating pressure in one part of circuit to create pressure gradient
Types of Circulatory systems;
-2 other types of fluid
Other fluids: Interstitial (ECF that bathes tissues) and Lymph
Evolution of Circulatory Systems -> Overview
Common features of vertebrate circulatory system
Advantages of closed circulatory system (3)
*generally support higher lvls of metabolic activity
2 types of myocardium used to generate contractile force
-which one prominent over time
*shift from mostly spongey to compact over time
Number of Heart chambers over time
-what current groups have
Fish Heart
Fish circulation
Amphibian Heart
-type of myocardium tissue
Amphibian Circulation
Reptile hearts (turtles, snakes and lizards)
Reptile circulations
Crocodile heart
Avian and Mammalian Hearts
*compact myocardium
Advantages of Separate pulmonary and Systemic Circulations (3)
Other evolutionary changes in cardiovascular system
Blood
Blood: fluid in heart and blood vessels
-Divided into plasma portion (water component - has ions, organic solutes and proteins) and cellular portion (produced from stem cells in bone marrow)
Red Blood cells
-Advantages of biconcave erythrocyte shape
-Are the most numerous cellular component
-Specialised for oxygen transport
-Shape varies - round, oval or biconcave
Advantages of biconcave;
-Large SA, sort distance b/w interior and exterior edge (favors diffusion
-can deform to squeeze through small capillaries
-can tolerate a degree of swelling w/out bursting
Blood flow around body
-5 types of blood vessels blood encounters
Blood flow through Heart;
-Blood encounters 5 types of vessels; each w/ different structural features and functions
->veins, arteries, venules, arterioles, capillaries
Blood flow through heart;
-blood flows passively down pressure gradients
-gradients generated by venous return and contraction of heart
*unidirectional heart valves stop backwards blood flow
The Cardiac Cycle
-Cardiac Cycle: the electrical and contractile (mechanical) events associated with the movement of blood through the heart during a single heart beat
Systole: contraction; blood forced into next chamber or out into circulation
Diastole: Relaxation; blood enters the chamber
*atria contract together; ventricles contract together
Electrical activity of the heart
Electrical activity and blood flow of the heart