Lecture 5: The Circulatory System
(Cardiovascular system + Lymphatic system)
Cardiovascular system
Consists of:
• Heart
• Blood vessels
• Blood
*Anatomical right and left*
What is the function of the heart?
The heart pumps blood through blood vessels to all parts of the
body.
This functions to:
(1) Deliver _________
Oz and nutrients to cells and tissues
(2) Remove _________and
Oz other waste products from cells and tissues
Where is the heart located in the body?
Base
Apex
Right Left
Where is the heart located in the body?
Heart wall is mostly composed of muscle!
Myocardium: layer of cardiac muscle forming the heart wall
Why is the myocardium of
the left ventricle so much
thicker than that of the right
ventricle?
Right ventricle sends blood to lungs, left
ventricle sends blood to the entire
body
Structures of the heart
Q: Is deoxygenated blood
actually blue?
Oxygen-rich
No
Oxygen-poor
Arrows: structures you
need to know Anterior (front) view
Posterior (back) view
Frontal section (cut)
Great vessels of the heart
(i) Superior vena cava: upper body →right atrium
(ii) Inferior vena cava: lower body → right atrium Veins
(iii) Pulmonary veins (4): lungs → left atrium • carry blood
towards heart
(iv) Pulmonary trunk: right ventricle → lungs
- Branches into 2 pulmonary arteries Arteries
(v) Aorta: left ventricle → body • carry blood
away from heart
Includevalves
whendescribing TO BODY (systemic circulation)
bloodflow
from body
to lungs
to lungs
from lungs
from lungs
from lungs
from lungs
from body
Heart valves
Ensure that blood moves through heart in one direction
Atrioventricular (AV) valves
(Separate atria and ventricles)
Prevent blood ow from ventricles to atria
Function?
Function of chordae tendineae?
(heart strings)
Hold the valves
Semilunar valves
Function?
Prevent ow of blood from arteries to ventricles
What is the sound of your heartbeat?
“LUB DUP”
AV valves closing Semilunar valves closing
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gJpT_wHZeF8
Summary of heart valves
(i) Atrioventricular (AV) valves
o Bicuspid (Mitral)- LEFT
o Tricuspid - RIGHT
• Close when ventricles contract (open when ventricles relax)
• Stops backflow of blood from ventricles into atria
(ii) Semilunar valves
o Pulmonary (pulmonary trunk)
o Aortic
• Open when ventricles contract (close when ventricles relax)
• Stops backflow of blood from arteries to ventricles
Pulmonary and systemic circulation
The heart is acting as two
individual pumps:
• Pulmonary circuit pump
• Systemic circuit pump
Both pumps are
pumping at the
same time! Blood flows through the
pulmonary AND systemic
circuit with every heart beat!
Congestive heart failure
Right heart failure Left heart failure
Peripheral Pulmonary
congestion congestion
• Fluid accumulation in • Fluid accumulation
body tissues (more in lungs
notably in the feet,
ankles, fingers)
The cardiac cycle: 1 complete heartbeat
• Systole – heart contraction
• Diastole – heart relaxation
• ~ 75 beats / min (0.8 sec / cycle)
Contraction and relaxation refers to the contraction and
relaxation of the ventricles (as they are doing most of the
pumping work).
The cardiac cycle
The cardiac cycle (summary)
(1) Atrial diastole / ventricular diastole (0.4s)
• Heart is relaxed, blood is flowing into
atria into ventricles
(2) Atrial systole / ventricular diastole (0.1s)
• Atria contract to empty remaining blood
into ventricles
(3) Ventricular systole / atrial diastole (0.3s)
• Ventricles contract!
• AV valves close
• Semilunar valves open
• Blood flows from ventricles into aorta
and pulmonary trunk
What controls each heart beat?
• Specialized cardiac muscle cells are part of the intrinsic conduction system
of the heart
• These cells are self-excitable (can contract without signals from the nervous
system)
Intrinsic cardiac conduction system
• Cells of the cardiac conduction system have different intrinsic rates of
contraction
• SA node: 60-100bpm.
• Atria: 60-80bpm.
• AV node: 40- 60bpm.
• Ventricles: 20-40bpm.
http://www.medicine.mcgill.ca/melp/tuts/r
hythm/rhythm3.htm
Depolarization causes muscle contraction
• The Sinoatrial (SA) node has the highest rate of depolarization and sets the
pace for the entire heart. It is the pacemaker!
Electrical impulses spread quickly
through the heart
• Cardiac muscle cells are electrically coupled by intercalated disks (contain
gap junctions) between adjacent cells
• Gap junctions connect cytoplasm of 2 cells
Cardiac cycle is regulated by electrical
impulses that radiate through the heart
0.12s
delay
Electrical impulses
cause contraction!
Cardiac cycle is regulated by electrical
impulses that radiate through the heart
(1) SA node sends out an electrical impulse to the atria and the AV node.
• Atria contract in unison!
(2) AV node delays the the signal (~0.1s) before relaying impulse to the AV
bundle, the bundle branches and the Purkinje fibers.
• Allows atria to fully empty before ventricles contract
(3) Bundle branches conduct impulse to the apex of the heart
(4) Purkinje fibers conduct impulse throughout the ventricular walls
• Ventricles contract beginning at heart apex (“wringing action”)
Artificial pacemakers
• How does an artificial pacemaker work? ArtificialSAnode
cardiac conduction
• Why would someone need an artificial pacemaker? Issuewithintrinsic
Implanted electrodes send
electrical impulses to
cardiac muscle cells to
regulate heart rate
Factors that affect heart rate
(1) Two sets of nerves act on the SA node to increase or decrease heart rate
• Sympathetic nerves → increase HR Ifightorflight
• Parasympathetic nerves → decrease HR rustanddigest
(2) Hormones
• Epinephrine (released from adrenal glands) increases HR
• Thyroid hormone increases HR
(3) Body temperature
• Increase in body temperature increases HR
• Decrease in body temperature decreases HR
(4) Exercise
• HR increases in response to exercise (increased metabolic needs of body)
ECG: Electrocardiogram
• Electrical impulses generated during the cardiac cycle produce electrical currents
that are conducted through body fluids to the skin
• Currents can be detected by electrodes and recorded as an ECG (also called EKG)
http://biometrics.mainguet.org/types/cardiac.htm
ECG: Electrocardiogram
• Depolarization of muscle cells causes contraction
• Cells must repolarize before they can be depolarized again
ECG: Electrocardiogram
SA node fires
P-wave:
• Depolarization of SA node and atria
QRS complex:
• Ventricular depolarization
T-wave:
• Ventricular repolarization
Where is atrial repolarization? ___________________
QRS
by
Masked
Where does the AV node fire? ___________________
ECG: Electrocardiogram
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_conduction_system_of_the_heart
ECG: Electrocardiogram
What can go wrong?
Fibrillation: “V-Fib”
• Lack of adequate blood supply to the heart caused by a myocardial infarction
may cause fibrillation, an uncontrolled shuddering of the heart, making the
heart useless as a pump. Defibrillators stop fibrillation by delivering an electric
shock that “resets” the heart .
Blood vessels
Arteries:
• Carry blood away from heart
- (towards capillaries)
• Branch into arterioles
Veins:
• Carry blood towards the heart
- (away from capillaries)
• Venules converge into veins
Capillaries:
• Site of exchange (blood → tissue; tissue → blood)
• Upstream end branches from arterioles
• Downstream end converges into venules
What differences do you notice between
arteries and veins?
Artery has bigger lumen and veins, more smooth muscles
Blood vessel structure
Exchange with tissues is
happening here!
Blood vessel structure: 3 layers (tunics)
(1) Inner layer (intima):
- Layer of simple squamous epithelium • Capillaries only have
- Also called endothelium the inner layer!
- Minimizes resistance to blood flow
(2) Middle layer (media):
- Smooth muscle and elastic fibers
- For strength, movement and elasticity
http://www.passmyexams.co.uk/GCSE/biology/capillaries.html
(3) Outer layer (externa):
- Connective tissue made largely of collagen fibers
- For support and protection
Blood vessel structure: arteries vs veins
Feature Difference Reason
Largerinveins
Lumen Low peripheral resistance
Larger in arteries
Middle layer (media) To withstand high pressure
Longerin veins
Outside layer
Provides support
(externa)
Elastic lamina Onlypresentin arteries
To withstand high pressure
(internal/external)
Onlypresentinveins Facilitates return of blood to
Valves
heart (prevents backflow)
It’s all about pressure!
Blood pressure decreases as blood
travels away from the heart ventricles
Venous valves and the skeletal muscle pump
• Contraction of skeletal muscles provides a
“milking” action to push blood back to
the heart.
• Valves close to ensure blood only moves
in one direction (towards the heart)
Blood flows slowest through capillaries!
Slow flow in capillaries enhances exchange!
Relative cross-sectional
of different vessels of the
vascular bed
Blood pressure
• The hydrostatic force that blood exerts on the vessel walls
• Pressure gradient provides driving force to keep blood moving
- (high pressure → low pressure)
Measuring your blood pressure
Are we measuring venous or arterial blood pressure?
Arterial
Systolic pressure / Diastolic pressure
(ventricles contracted) (ventricles relaxed)
Normal blood pressure in
young healthy individual:
120 / 70 mm Hg
Blood pressure must be maintained
within a specific range
Too HIGH:
• Could cause a stroke
(blood vessel damage)
Too LOW:
• Lose consciousness
(inadequate tissue perfusion)
http://www.bloodpressureuk.org/BloodPressureandyou/Thebasics/Bloodpressurechart
Blood pressure is measured using a sphygmomanometer
• Aortic pressure is
measured indirectly in
the brachial artery
Blood pressure is measured using a sphygmomanometer
• Aortic pressure is
measured indirectly in
the brachial artery
Blood pressure is measured using a sphygmomanometer
• Aortic pressure is
measured indirectly in
the brachial artery
Blood pressure is measured using a sphygmomanometer
• Aortic pressure is
measured indirectly in
the brachial artery
Heart rate (pulse)
• Heart rate can be measured indirectly by Locations to measure pulse:
measuring pulse
• Pulse is the rhythmic stretching of arteries
caused by contraction of the ventricles
• Peripheral resistance in arterioles
impedes blood from exiting the arteries;
this causes the arteries to stretch (systolic
pressure)
Factors affecting blood pressure
(1) Peripheral resistance: (determined mostly by arterioles)
• Resistance to flow in systemic circulation (friction within vessel walls)
• Depends on
o Blood viscosity
o Total blood vessel length
o Blood vessel diameter
http://medifitbiologicals.com/vasodilators/
Diameter of arterioles is determined by vasoconstriction/vasodilation of
arterioles which is controlled by action of nerve impulses, hormones and other
chemicals on the smooth muscle surrounding the vessels
Vasodilation: decrease blood pressure
Vasoconstriction: increase blood
pressure
Example:
Effect on blood pressure?
- nitric oxide → vasodilation
- endothelin → vasocontriction How does stress affect arterioles?
Factors affecting blood pressure (cont’d)
(2) Cardiac output: (stroke volume X HR)
• Increased cardiac output → increases pressure
(3) Blood volume
• Increased blood volume → increases pressure
(4) Vessel elasticity
• Less elasticity → higher pressure (ex: arteriosclerosis)
Cardiac output (CO)
• Amount of blood pumped by the heart in a single minute!
Cardiac output depends on 2 variables:
i. Stroke volume (SV): volume of blood pumped out by ventricles
during each contraction (~70mL)
ii. Heart rate (HR): beats /min
75 bpm
Example:
CO SU x HR
70mL x1756pm 5,254min
Summary of factors affecting blood pressure
Nerve impulses, hormones and other chemical signals
Blood volume
How does stress affect blood pressure?
Regulating blood pressure during exercise
During exercise:
Cardiac output (stroke volume X HR) ________________
Increases
(hint: how does exercise affect HR)
Peripheral resistance __________________
Demeans
(hint: would arterioles in muscles constrict or dilate?)
• Cardiac output and peripheral resistance are adjusted together during exercise so
muscles get enough blood flow and blood pressure is maintained (not too low or high)
• You can exercise without passing out or having a stroke!
Cardiac output must equal venous return
If blood pressure is low in veins compared to arteries how can:
venous return = cardiac output?
Resistance of arterioles and
capillaries dissipates the
pressure generated by the
pumping heart
Factors that increase venous return
(1) Skeletal muscle pump: skeletal muscles and valves provide a “milking” action to
keep blood moving towards the heart.
(2) Respiratory pump: inhaling decreases pressure in the right atrium, vena cava
and other large veins near the heart allowing them to expand and fill with blood
(caused by a drop in intra-thoracic pressure)
(3) Lumens of veins are wider than arteries: less resistance to flow
Rhythmic contractions of smooth muscle in the walls of veins and venules
account for some movement of blood
Capillaries
• At any given time only 5-10% of
your body’s capillaries have
blood flowing through them!
• Brain, heart, kidney and liver
capillaries are usually filled to
capacity!
• Constriction of arterioles and
Precapillary sphincters (rings of
smooth muscle) control flow of
blood through capillary beds
Example:
During exercise, blood is
diverted from the digestive
tract to skeletal muscles
What would blood flow look
like right after a meal?
How do molecules cross capillaries?
(1) Vesicles form by endocytosis on
one side and release their contents
by exocytosis on the other side
(2) Diffusion through membrane
(3) Bulk flow through clefts between
endothelial cells (due to fluid pressure)
http://wiki.ubc.caFile:Endothelial_illustration_of_a_continuous_capillary..png#filelinks
• Blood cells and most proteins are too large to cross the capillary wall
(under normal circumstances!)
Fluid flow across capillaries
Amount and direction of fluid flow depends on:
i) Hydrostatic pressure: fluid pressing against wall (due to blood pressure); “pushing out”
ii) Osmotic pressure: non-diffusible plasma proteins pull water into capillary; “sucking in”
Arterial end: Venous end:
Fluid is lost 85% of fluid
is reabsorbed
“pushing” > “sucking” “pushing” = “sucking” “pushing” < “sucking”
https://opentextbc.ca/anatomyandphysiology/chapter/20-3-capillary-exchange/
Fluid flow across capillaries
ISF
“pushing out” force
(Hydrostatic pressure) “sucking in” force
(osmotic pressure)
blood
ISF
• Remaining 15% of fluid is
returned to the blood via
the lymphatic system!
Lymphatic system
• Fluids (and some proteins) that
leak from the capillaries into the
ISF are returned to the blood via
the lymphatic system
• Lymph flows through a network
of lymphatic vessels and
composition is similar to ISF
• Drains into cardiovascular system
via the subclavian veins
Lymphatic system
• Fluid enters the lymphatic system by diffusing into lymphatic capillaries that are
intermingled among cardiovascular capillaries
• Vessels have valves that prevent backflow and the movement of skeletal muscles pushes
fluid towards the heart
Lymph nodes
• Lymph nodes are bean-shaped organs
located at intervals along the lymphatic
system
Blood
BLOOD
PLASMA FORMED ELEMENTS
-90% water
-Salts
-Plasma proteins
Erythrocytes Leukocytes Platelets
(Red blood cells) (White blood cells) Clotting
Granulocytes Agranulocytes
-Neutrophils -Lymphocytes
-Eosinophils -Monocytes
-Basophils
55% ~45% >1%
Plasma
Function: carries blood cells, cell fragments, nutrients, metabolic wastes, respiratory
gases, and hormones around the body
Composition: (transparent, straw-coloured, pH 7.35-7.45)
i. ~90% water
ii. Ions (electrolytes)
• Osmotic balance
• Functioning of muscles and nervous system
plasma
• pH buffering
iii. Plasma proteins
• Osmotic balance
• pH buffering
• Viscosity of blood
• Transport of water insoluble lipids
• Immunity (antibodies) WBCs
• Blood clotting (ex: fibrinogen)
RBCs
Plasma without clotting factors = serum http://www.seplessons.org/node/2798
Erythrocytes (red blood cells)
5-6 million cells / mm3
Function: transports oxygen
Structure:
• Biconcave disc (more surface area!)
• No nuclei (more space for hemoglobin!)
• No mitochondria (make ATP by anaerobic metabolism)
• Contains ~250 million molecules of hemoglobin
Hemoglobin
• Each hemoglobin protein is made of 4 polypeptides
o can bind 4 molecules of O2
• Iron atoms form part of the heme group that binds
oxygen
- 4 heme groups → 4 O2 molecules
• Hemoglobin also binds nitric oxide (NO)
o NO causes vasodilation which relaxes capillary walls to
help delivery of O2 into cells
Leukocytes (white blood cells)
5 000-10 000 cells / mm3
Function:
• Effectors of the immune system (fight pathogens!)
• Spend most of the time patrolling the interstitial fluid and lymphatic system
Leukocytes (white blood cells) Never let monkeys
5 000-10 000 cells / mm3 eat bananas
• Neutrophils and Monocytes: phagocytes that engulf and digest bacteria and cell debris
• Lymphocytes: develop into specialized B cells and T cells
• Basophils and Eosinophils: involved in the allergic response
Platelets (cell fragments)
250 000 – 400 000 cells / mm3
Function: blood clotting!
• Clotting is initiated when the endothelium of a vessel is damaged and
connective tissue in the wall is exposed to blood:
(1) Platelets adhere to collagen
fibers and release a
substance that make nearby
platelets sticky
(2) Sticky platelets form a plug
(3) Fibrin forms a mesh that
traps RBCs and platelets to
form a clot
Clotting disorders
Hemophilia:
• An inherited defect in any step of the clotting process
• Causes excessive bleeding from even minor cuts and bruises
Spontaneous clotting (Usually prevented by anticlotting factors in the blood):
• Platelets clump with fibrin within a blood vessel forming a thrombus (blood clot)
• A travelling blood clot is called an embolus
• Thrombus or embolus can block the flow of blood and cause a heart attack or stroke
Blood cells are produced in bone marrow
• Blood cells wear out and must be constantly
replaced!
Ex: Erythrocytes usually circulate for only 3-4
months before being destroyed by phagocytic
cells in the liver and spleen
• All cells develop from a single population of
pluripotent stem cells in the red marrow of
bones (ribs, vertebrae, breastbone, pelvis)
Pluripotent: have the potential to become any type of blood cell
Leukemia
• Leukemia is a type of blood cancer involving the elevated production of
abnormal white blood cells
Treatment:
• Destroy a patient’s bone marrow
and replace with bone marrow
from a healthy individual
• This replaces the cancerous
pluripotent cells with non-
cancerous ones
By Mikael Häggström - All used images are in public domain., Public Domain,
https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=8332855
tin's
Don'tstudy
slideformidterm X Erythrocyte production is regulated by
the hormone erythropoietin
• Erythropoietin is produced in the kidneys in response to low O2 levels in
tissues (hypoxia) to stimulate the production of RBCs (erythropoiesis)
Arteriosclerosis
Arteriosclerosis is the thickening and hardening of an artery wall
Ex: Atherosclerosis (a type of arteriosclerosis)
i. Plaques develop in the inner wall of the artery
(contain fat, cholesterol and calcium deposits)
ii. Formation is due to an inflammatory response
that is initiated by the deposition of lipoproteins
(LDL) in the vessel wall
iii. Process takes several years and causes
narrowing of the vessel and hardening of the
vessel walls
iv. Plaques can rupture and promote the formation
of a thrombus (or an embolus)
Risk factors for atherosclerosis
(1) Hypertension (high blood pressure)
• Causes chronic damage to the endothelium that lines arteries (damage promotes
plaque formation)
• Genetics, smoking, lack of exercise, diet rich in saturated fat and high cholesterol
levels all contribute to hypertension
(2) LDL / HDL ratio
• LDL (low density lipoprotein) Badcholesterol
- Associated with depositing cholesterol
in arterial plaques
• HDL (high density lipoprotein) Goodcholesterol
- Associated with removing cholesterol
from the blood
https://plantbasedscientist.wordpress.com/2013/10/27/macronutrients-101-
cholesterol/
Heart attack and stroke
• Heart attack (myocardial infarction) is the death of cardiac muscle tissue caused
by the prolonged blockage of one or more coronary arteries
• Stroke is the death of nervous tissue in the brain caused by the blockage of an
artery or a leaking/burst blood vessel in the brain
o In both a heart attack and
stroke tissue dies due to lack
of oxygen!
o Any tissue downstream of the
blockage may die
Angina pectoris
• If a coronary artery is partially blocked a person may feel occasional chest pains
• This is a sign that part of the heart is not receiving enough blood (ex: narrowing
of arteries due to atherosclerosis)
However...many people do not
experience any symptoms of
cardiovascular disease prior to a
heart attack or stroke!
Blausen.com staff (2014). "Medical gallery of Blausen Medical 2014". WikiJournal of
Medicine 1 (2). DOI:10.15347/wjm/2014.010. ISSN 2002-4436.