the circulatory, respiratory & immune systems. hw: p. 950 #1-4

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Chapter 37 & 40.2 THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS

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Circulatory system is composed of the heart, blood vessels and blood that flows within. Main function is to transport oxygen and nutrients and dispose of waste.

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Page 1: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

Chapter 37 & 40.2THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS

Page 2: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

HW: P. 950 #1-4

Chapter 37.1 The Circulatory System

Page 3: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

CIRCULATORY = TRANSPORTATION

• Circulatory system is composed of the heart, blood vessels and blood that flows within.

• Main function is to transport oxygen and nutrients and dispose of waste.

Page 4: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

THE HEART• The heart is an organ that

pumps blood. It is mostly composed of layers of muscle, myocardium.

• 4 Chambers:• Left/Right Atrium: receives blood• Left/Right Ventricle: pumps blood

out of heart• Left = oxygenated (red)• Right = deoxygenated (blue)

• Pulmonary Circulation: pumps blood between heart and lungs

• Systemic Circulation: pumps blood between heart and body

• Valves: close when ventricles contract; keep blood moving in one direction

Page 5: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

THE HEARTBEAT• Pacemaker: group of

cells in the SA node that “set the pace” of the heart

• Impulse spreads from SA node to atria then to AV node and ventricles

Page 6: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

BLOOD VESSELS (Fig. 37-5)

• Three Types:• Arteries: thick vessels that carry blood Away from the

heart; high pressure• Capillaries: smallest vessels; where exchange occurs• Veins: vessels that return blood to the heart; some

contain valves to keep blood flow in one direction; skeletal muscles increase venous return

Page 7: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

BLOOD PRESSURE• Blood pressure: pressure

of blood on vessel walls• Sphygmomanometer:

device used to measure blood pressure• Normal measurement: 120/80• First measurement: systolic pressure• Second measurement: diastolic pressure

• Medulla oblongata regulates blood pressure with neurotransmitters

Page 8: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

CIRCULATORY DISEASES• Atherosclerosis:

plaques (fat deposits) form on vessel walls

• Narrowed arteries make the heart work harder to pump blood

• Clots can form and break off into vessels of the brain, causing a stroke.

Page 9: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

HW: P. 955 #1-4

37.2 BLOOD & THE LYMPHATIC SYSTEM

Page 10: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

BLOOD PLASMA

• Blood collects…• Oxygen from lungs• Nutrients from digestive system•Waste from tissues

• Blood composition:• 45% cells• 55% plasma (fluid in blood, mostly water)

Page 11: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

BLOOD CELLS• Red Blood Cells (RBCs):• Carry oxygen• Hemoglobin: iron-containing protein that binds oxygen• Biconcave shape• No nuclei; life cycle ~120 days

• White Blood Cells (WBCs):• Guard against infection, fight parasites and attack bacteria• Phagocytes “eat” pathogens• Lymphocytes: immune response (T-cell, B-cells)

Page 12: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

PLATELETS AND CLOTTING• Platelets: fragments of

large cells found in bone marrow

• “sticky” platelets clump together and form a clot at damaged sites; a protein cascade forms tough fibers to seal the wound

• Can you think of a disease where clotting factors are mutated?

Page 13: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

THE LYMPHATIC SYSTEM• Lymphatic system:

network of vessels, nodes, and organs that collect fluid lost by the blood and return it back to the circulatory system.

• Lymph carries lymphocytes throughout the body.

• Thymus: gland where T-cells mature

Page 14: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

HW: P. 1042 # 1-4

Chapter 40.2: THE IMMUNE SYSTEM

Page 15: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

THE IMMUNE SYSTEM• Function: to fight

infection through immunity, the production of cells that inactivate foreign substances or cells.

• Two types of defenses:• Nonspecific: keep things out (fortress walls)• Specific: track down pathogens that enter the body (security guards)

Page 16: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

NONSPECIFIC DEFENSES

• 1st line of defense: skin, mucus, sweat and tears act as a barrier

• 2nd line of defense: inflammatory response (WBCs migrate to injury site)• Fever: increased body temperature can kill many pathogens

• Interferons: proteins that interfere with viral replication

Page 17: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

SPECIFIC DEFENSES

Humoral immunity (fig. 40-9, p. 1039): B cells attack antigens in body fluids by producing antibodies, Y-shaped proteins that target pathogens for destruction

Cell-mediated immunity (fig. 40-10, p. 1040): killer T cells track down and destroy cells infected from the inside (assassins of the WBCs)

Immune Response: specific defenses that attack invading pathogens (antigens)

Page 18: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

ACQUIRED IMMUNITY

• Active immunity: developed after exposure to an antigen (i.e. vaccines or natural exposure to infection cause the body to produce antibodies)

• Passive immunity: injection of antibodies from another organism (i.e. mother’s antibodies during breastfeeding temporarily provides immunity for the baby)

Page 19: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

HW: P. 963 #1-4, P. 967 #1-10

Chapter 37.3 The Respiratory System

Page 20: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

HUMAN RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

• Respiration:• Food Energy (cellular)• Gas exchange

• Function: gas exchange (O2 and CO2) between blood, the air, and tissues

• Organs: nose, pharynx (throat), larynx, trachea (windpipe), bronchi, and lungs

Page 21: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

ORGANS OF THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

• Pharynx: passage of air and food

• Trachea: passage of air• Epiglottis: tissue blocks

trachea during swallowing (prevents choking)

• Cilia and mucus: warm, moisten, and filter air to keep lungs clean

• Larynx: vibration of vocal cords produce sound (voice box)

• Bronchi: branch into the lungs• Bronchi Bronchioles Alveoli• Alveoli: tiny air sacs surrounded by capillaries; where gas exchange occurs (fig. 37-14, p. 958)

Page 22: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

GAS EXCHANGE• Occurs between the alveoli and capillaries•Oxygen: alveoli blood•Carbon dioxide: blood alveoli

Page 23: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

BREATHING

• Diaphragm: flat muscle underneath lungs (CNS control)• Pressure controls breathing (high low)• Inhale (breath in): diaphragm contracts, chest rises, low

lung pressure• Exhale (breath out): diaphragm relaxes, chest lowers,

high lung pressure

Page 24: THE CIRCULATORY, RESPIRATORY & IMMUNE SYSTEMS. HW: P. 950 #1-4

TOBACCO & THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

• Nicotine: addictive chemical, increases heart rate and blood pressure• Carbon monoxide: prevents oxygen binding

to hemoglobin• Tar: cancerous compounds