Circulatory
Circulatory
Circulatory
This organ system is mainly composed of heart and blood vessels which main
function is to provide oxygen, nutrients and hormones to muscles, tissues and organs
throughout your body. Also, to remove waste from cells and organs so your body can
dispose of it.
Your circulatory system functions with the help of blood vessels that include arteries,
veins and capillaries. These blood vessels work with your heart and lungs to
continuously circulate blood through your body. Here’s how:
1. The heart’s bottom right pumping chamber (right ventricle) sends blood that’s low
in oxygen (oxygen-poor blood) to the lungs. Blood travels through the pulmonary
trunk (the main pulmonary artery).
2. Blood cells pick up oxygen in the lungs.
3. Pulmonary veins carry the oxygenated blood from the lungs to the heart’s left
atrium (upper heart chamber).
4. The left atrium sends the oxygenated blood into the left ventricle (lower
chamber). This muscular part of the heart pumps blood out to the body through
the arteries.
5. As it moves through your body and organs, blood collects and drops off nutrients,
hormones and waste products.
6. The veins carry deoxygenated blood and carbon dioxide back to the heart, which
sends the blood to the lungs.
7. Your lungs get rid of the carbon dioxide when you exhale.
A. Heart wall
There are three layers of the heart wall.
1.The epicardium is the heart wall’s outer layer
2. the myocardium is the middle — and muscular layer and
3. the endocardium is the heart’s innermost layer.
Circulatory Circuits:
The circulatory system has three circuits. Blood circulates through your heart and
through these circuits in a continuous pattern:
1. The pulmonary circuit: This circuit carries blood without oxygen from the heart to
the lungs. The pulmonary veins return oxygenated blood to the heart.
2. The systemic circuit: In this circuit, blood with oxygen, nutrients and hormones
travel from the heart to the rest of the body. In the veins, the blood picks up waste
products as the body uses up the oxygen, nutrients and hormones.
2. Blood Vessels- another component of the circulatory system that allows to transport
blood and oxygen within the different body parts.
3. Capillaries: These blood vessels connect very small arteries (arterioles) and veins
(venules). Capillaries have thin walls that allow oxygen, carbon dioxide, nutrients and
waste products to pass into and out of cells.
Your heart is the only circulatory system organ. Blood goes from the heart to the lungs
to get oxygen. The lungs are part of the respiratory system. Your heart then pumps
oxygenated blood through arteries to the rest of the body.
3. Blood- Blood is a combination of plasma and cells that circulate through the body. It
supplies essential substances, such as sugars, oxygen, and hormones, to cells and
organs, and removes waste from cells.
Components of Blood
1.Plasma
Plasma accounts for around 55% of blood fluid in humans. Plasma is 92% water,
and the contents of the remaining 8% include:
glucose
hormones
proteins
mineral salts
fats
vitamins
The remaining 45% of blood mainly consists of red and white blood cells and
platelets. Each of these has a vital role to play in keeping the blood functioning
effectively.
Image of Blood Plasma: longlonglife.org
4. Platelets, or thrombocytes
Platelets interact with clotting proteins to prevent or stop bleeding. There should
be between 150,000 and 400,000 platelets per microliter of blood.
Bone marrow produces red blood cells, white blood cells, and platelets, and from
there they enter the bloodstream. Plasma is mostly water that is absorbed from
ingested food and fluid by the intestines. The heart pumps them around the body
as blood by way of the blood vessels.
Image of Platelets: www.viagogo.com
Functions of Blood
Blood has various functions that are central to survival. They include:
supplying oxygen to cells and tissues
providing essential nutrients to cells, such as amino acids, fatty acids, and
glucose
removing waste materials, such as carbon dioxide, urea, and lactic acid
protecting the body from diseases, infections, and foreign bodies through the
action of white blood cells
regulating body temperature
The platelets in blood enable the clotting, or coagulation, of blood. When
bleeding occurs, the platelets group together to create a clot. The clot forms a
scab, which stops the bleeding and helps protect the wound from infection.
Conditions that affect the Circulatory System
Many conditions can affect the health of your circulatory system, including:
Aneurysms: Aneurysms occur when an artery wall weakens and enlarges. The
weak spot can bulge as blood moves through the artery. The weak spot may
tear, causing a life-threatening rupture. Aneurysms can affect any artery,
but aortic aneurysms, abdominal aortic aneurysms and brain aneurysms are the
most common.
High blood pressure: Your arteries work hard to circulate blood throughout the
body. When the pressure (force of blood against the blood vessel walls) gets too
high, you develop high blood pressure. When the arteries become less elastic
(stretchy), less blood and oxygen reaches organs like the heart. High blood
pressure puts you at risk for cardiovascular disease, heart attacks and strokes.
Plaque deposits: High cholesterol and diabetes can lead to fat and other
substances collecting in the blood. These substances form deposits called
plaques on artery walls. This condition is atherosclerosis, or narrowed or
hardened arteries. Atherosclerosis increases the risk of blood clots and
strokes, coronary artery disease, peripheral artery disease (and other artery
diseases), heart attacks and kidney disease.
Venous disease: Venous diseases tend to affect veins in the lower body.
Problems like chronic venous insufficiency and varicose veins occur when blood
can’t flow back to the heart and pools in leg veins. Deep vein thrombosis (DVT),
a blood clot in the legs, can lead to a life-threatening pulmonary embolism.