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Module 3
Transport in animals
blood, tissue fluid and lymph
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Bupe katebe
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Cards (19)
What is oncotic pressure?
Tendency of water to move
into
the blood by
osmosis
What do plasma proteins generate in oncotic pressure?
An osmotic effect (for water to move into the blood by osmosis)
they give blood in capillaries a high
solute
potential and low
water
potential compared to the surrounding fluid
so they cause a water potential
difference
between the blood and tissue fluid OUTSIDE the blood
causes water to move
into
the blood by osmosis from the surrounding fluid
What is the measurement of oncotic pressure?
ALWAYS
-3.3kPa
What is oncotic pressure generated by?
Plasma proteins
What is hydrostatic pressure generated by?
Heart contraction
What are the measurements of hydrostatic pressure
Differs according to
location
At arterial end- +
4.6kPa
Venous end- +
2.3 kPa
What does it mean when pressure is positive?
substances forced OUT OF blood capillaries-
hydrostatic
pressure exceeds
oncotic
pressure
Substances transported in the blood?
Oxygen to and carbon dioxide from
respiring
cells
Digested food from the
small intestine
Nitrogenous waste products from the cells to
excretory
organs
Chemical messengers
Platelets to
damaged areas
Cells and antibodies involved in the
immune response
Food molecules from
storage
compounds to cells that need them
How does blood influence the temperature and pH of the body?
Maintains
steady
body temperature
Acts as a
buffer,
minimising pH changes
Why does lymph form?
Some of the tissue fluid doesn’t return to the
capillaries
10% of it drains into lymph
capillaries
and is known as
lymph
How is the composition of lymph different to that of blood plasma and tissue fluid?
Has
less
oxygen
fewer
nutrients
Fatty acids
absorbed from the small intestine
How is lymph transported through lymph vessels?
By the
squeezing
of the body’s
muscles
How is the back flow of lymph prevented?
Using one way
valves
What structures are lined along lymph vessels and what builds up in these structures?
Lymph nodes
Lymphocytes
build up in lymph nodes when necessary and produce
antibodies
What is the role of lymph nodes?
Intercept
bacteria
and debris from the lymph
These are ingested by
phagocytes
found in the nodes
Major role in
defence
mechanisms of the body
What are enlarged lymph nodes a sign of?
That the body is fighting off an
invasive
pathogen
what does it mean when pressure is negative in terms of oncotic and hydrostatic pressure?
Water moves
into
the
capillaries,
into the blood-
Oncotic
pressure exceeds
hydrostatic
pressure.
state the events taking place when hydrostatic pressure is generated
as blood flows through arterioles into
capillaries
, it is still under pressure from
contractions
of the heart
this pressure is
hydrostatic pressure
+
4.6kPa
higher than oncotic pressure (-
3.3kPa
) so
fluid
exits the capillaries
this fluid fills spaces between cells and is called
tissue fluid
, diffusion of substances takes place between
cells
and
blood
through tissue fluid
as the blood moves towards the venous end of the capillary, hydrostatic pressure falls to +
2.3kPa
, less than oncotic pressure at
-3.3kPa
water moves back into the capillaries by
osmosis
how is tissue fluid different in composition to blood?
No
RBCs
no
plasma proteins