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Biology
Transport system of animals
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Double circulatory system
When the blood passes through the heart
twice
on one complete
circuit
of the body
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Double circulatory system
Found in all mammals,
birds
and
reptiles
Has two parts:
pulmonary system
and
systemic system
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Single circulatory system
When the blood passes through the heart only
once
on a
complete circuit
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Single
circulatory system
Blood just carries on around the fish's
body
Blood travels much more
slowly
to a fish's body organs than it does in a
mammal
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Heart
Pump that keeps
blood
flowing through the
vessels
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Heart
Valves
in the heart and blood vessels make sure the
blood
flows in the right direction
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Oxygenated blood
Blood in the
left-hand
side of the heart that has come from the
lungs
, containing oxygen
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Deoxygenated
blood
Blood that has been used by the body's
cells
and is
low
in oxygen
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Atria
The
two upper
chambers of the
heart
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Ventricles
The two
lower
chambers of the heart
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Septum
Separates the
chambers
on the
left-hand
side from the right-hand side
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Left atrium
Receives
blood
from the
pulmonary veins
, which come from the lungs
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Right atrium
Receives blood from the rest of the body arriving through the
vena cava
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Blood flow through the heart
1. Flows from
atria
to
ventricles
2.
Ventricles
pump
blood
out of the heart
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Ventricles
Have much thicker, more
muscular
walls than the
atria
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Left ventricle
Has an especially thick wall of
muscle
to pump the
blood
all around the body
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Right ventricle
Pumps blood to the
lungs
, which are very close to the
heart
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Atrioventricular valves
One-way
valves between the
left
atrium and ventricle
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Atrioventricular
valves
Stop blood flowing from the
ventricles
back to the
atria
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Coronary arteries
Blood vessels on the
outside
of the heart that supply blood to the
heart muscle
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Coronary heart disease (CHD)
If a coronary artery gets blocked, the cardiac muscle run short of
oxygen
and cannot contract, causing a
heart
attack or cardiac arrest
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Factors which increase the risk of CHD
Smoking
cigarettes
Diet
Obesity
Stress
Genes
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Exercise
Heart beats
faster
to deliver more blood and
oxygen
to the muscles
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Pacemaker
Patch of
muscle
in the right atrium that controls the
heart
beats by sending electrical signals
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Arteries
Carry blood
away
from the
heart
Small
lumen, relatively
narrow
Thick
and
strong
outer wall
Smooth
lining
Thick layer of
muscles
and
elastic
fibre
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Veins
Return
blood
to the heart
Fairly
thin
outer wall
Smooth
lining
Thin layer of
muscles
and
elastic
fibres than arteries
Large/wide lumen, contains
valves
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Capillaries
Very small
lumen
, very narrow, just wide enough for a
red blood cell
to pass through
Wall
made of
single layer
of cells
Very
thin
, only
one cell thick
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Plasma
Liquid part of the blood, mostly
water
containing many
substances
in solution
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Functions of plasma
Liquid
medium in which cells and
platelets
can float
Transport
carbon dioxide
in
solution
Transport
nutrients
in solution
Transport
hormones
in solution
Transport
heat
Transport
antibodies
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Red blood cells
Made in the
bone marrow
, contain haemoglobin which carries
oxygen
, biconcave discs with no nucleus
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Functions of red blood cells
Transport
oxygen
Transport small amount of
carbon dioxide
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Red blood cells
Lack of
nucleus
means more space for
haemoglobin
Small size and
shape
gives large surface area to volume ratio, enabling fast
oxygen
diffusion
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White blood cells
Have
nucleus
, can move around and squeeze out of
capillaries
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Functions of
white blood cells
Engulf
and destroy
pathogens
Make
antibodies
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Phagocytosis
Process where
white blood cells
take in and
digest bacteria
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Platelets
Small fragments of cells with no
nucleus
, made in the
red bone marrow
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Platelets
Help in
blood clotting
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Blood clotting
stops
pathogens
getting into the body through breaks in the skin and prevents too much blood loss
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