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Chapter

23
Circulation and
Respiration
PowerPoint Lectures created by Edward J. Zalisko for
Campbell Essential Biology, Sixth Edition, and
Campbell Essential Biology with Physiology, Fifth Edition
Eric J. Simon, Jean L. Dickey, Kelly A. Hogan, and Jane B. Reece

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Figure 23.0-1

Why Circulation and


Respiration Matter

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Figure 23.0-1a

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Figure 23.0-1b

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Figure 23.0-1c

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Biology and Society: Avoiding The Wall


What does it take to be an elite endurance athlete?
World-class champions have world-class
circulatory and respiratory systems.

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Figure 23.0-2

Chapter Thread: Athletic Endurance


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Biology and Society: Avoiding The Wall


To perform work over an extended period, muscle
cells require a steady supply of oxygen (O2) and
must continuously rid themselves of carbon dioxide
(CO2) waste.
What limits the stamina of most athletes is the
inability of their heart and lungs to deliver the
required amount of O2 to muscle cells.
Without enough O2 in their muscle cells, athletes will
hit the wallthat is, they will experience a sudden
loss of energy to the extent that they are unable to
continue to perform.
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Biology and Society: Avoiding The Wall


Properly functioning circulatory and respiratory
systems are essential to all of us.
The two systems are so closely interconnected that
we will explore both in this chapter.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


Every organism must exchange materials with its
environment, relying upon
diffusion, the spontaneous movement of molecules
from an area of higher concentration to an area of
lower concentration, and
a circulatory system, which facilitates the
exchange of materials, providing a rapid, longdistance internal transport system that brings
resources close enough to cells for diffusion to
occur.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


All but the simplest animals have a circulatory
system with three main components:
1. a central pump,
2. a vascular system (a set of tubes), and
3. a circulating fluid.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


In an open circulatory system,
the circulating fluid is pumped through open-ended
tubes and
flows out among cells.

Open circulatory systems are found in many


invertebrates, including most molluscs and all
arthropods.

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Figure 23.1

CIRCULATORY SYSTEM DIVERSITY


Open circulatory system

Closed circulatory system


Single circulation system

Vessels

Blood

Heart
Circulating
(interstitial) fluid

Molluscs, arthropods

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Double circulation system


Pulmonary
circuit

Interstitial fluid
Capillaries
Gills

Heart

Fish, rays, sharks

Systemic
circuit

Heart
Body

Lungs

Body

Amphibians, reptiles, mammals

Figure 23.1-1

Open circulatory system:


molluscs, arthropods
Vessels
Heart

Circulating
(interstitial) fluid

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Figure 23.1-2

Closed circulatory system


Single circulation system: fish, rays, sharks
Blood

Interstitial fluid
Capillaries
Heart
Gills

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Body

Figure 23.1-3

Closed circulatory system


Double circulation system: amphibians,
reptiles, mammals
Pulmonary
circuit

Systemic
circuit

Heart

Lungs

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Body

Figure 23.1-4

Open circulatory system: molluscs,


arthropods

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Figure 23.1-5

Single circulatory system: fish, rays, sharks

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Figure 23.1-6

Double circulatory system: amphibians,


reptiles, mammals

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


A closed circulatory system is called closed
because the circulating fluid, called blood, is
pumped within a set of closed tubes and is distinct
from the interstitial fluid.
Closed circulatory systems are found in many
invertebrates, including nearly all other animals.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


The closed circulatory system of humans and other
vertebrates is called a cardiovascular system,
and it consists of the
heart,
blood, and
blood vessels.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


Blood circulates to and from the heart through
three types of vessels.
1.

Arteries carry blood away from the heart,


branching into smaller arterioles as they
approach organs.

2.

Capillaries, with thin walls, allow exchange


between blood and interstitial fluid.

3.

Venules collect blood from the capillaries and


converge to form veins, which return
blood back
to the heart, completing the circuit.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


Two distinct cardiovascular, or closed circulatory
systems, exist in vertebrates.
1. In the single circulation system, found in bony
fishes, rays, and sharks, blood flows only once
through the heart by way of a single loop, or
circuit.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


2. In the double circulation system, found in
amphibians, reptiles (including birds), and
mammals, blood flows twice through the heart,
once between the lungs and the heart in the
pulmonary circuit and
a second time between the heart and the rest of the
body in the systemic circuit.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


The pulmonary circuit carries blood between the
heart and lungs.
In the lungs, CO2 diffuses from the blood into the
lungs, while O2 diffuses from the lungs into the
blood.
The pulmonary circuit then returns this O2-rich blood
back to the heart.

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Figure 23.2-1

CO2
Lung

CO2
Lung

O2

O2
Heart
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

(a) Pulmonary circuit


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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


The systemic circuit carries blood between the
heart and the rest of the body.
The blood supplies O2 to body tissues while it picks
up CO2.
The oxygen-poor blood returns to the heart via the
systemic circuit.

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Figure 23.2-2

CO2

O2

O2
CO2

(b) Systemic circuit


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O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


Obstruction of the cardiovascular system is
dangerous and sometimes deadly.
If a blood clot becomes lodged in a vessel of a lung,
it can cause shortness of breath and lung tissue
damage.
If the clot is large enough, it may completely
obstruct blood flow through the pulmonary circuit
and cause sudden death as the heart and brain lose
access to O2-rich blood.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Circulation


Clots lodged in the lungs often originate from clots
that form in the veins of the legs, a condition known
as deep vein thrombosis (DVT).
Risk factors for DVT include physical inactivity and
dehydration.

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The Human Cardiovascular System


The human cardiovascular system consists of the
heart,
blood vessels, and
circulating blood.

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The Path of Blood


Essential to the human cardiovascular system is
the four-chambered heart.
The heart always receives blood in a chamber
called the atrium (plural, atria), and blood is always
pumped away from the heart from a chamber called
the ventricle.
Both sides of the heart have one atrium and one
ventricle.

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The Path of Blood


The pulmonary and systemic circuits operate
simultaneously.
The two ventricles pump almost in unison, sending
some blood through the pulmonary circuit and the
rest through the systemic circuit.

Figure 23.3 traces the path of blood as it makes


one complete trip around the body.

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Animation: Path of Blood Flow in Mammals

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Figure 23.3-s1

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

Pulmonary
artery
Capillaries
of left lung

1
Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s2

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

Pulmonary
artery
Capillaries
of left lung

1
Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s3

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

Capillaries
of left lung

1
Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s4

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Capillaries
of left lung

3
4

1
Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s5

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary
artery
Capillaries
of left lung

3
4
5

1
2

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s6

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary
artery
Capillaries
of left lung

3
4

6
5

1
2

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s7

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary
artery
Capillaries
of left lung

3
4

6
5

1
2

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s8

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Pulmonary vein
Right atrium
Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
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Pulmonary
artery

Capillaries
of left lung

3
4

6
5

1
2

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s9

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

Aorta

Capillaries
of right lung

3
4

Pulmonary vein

3
4
5

1
7

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

Capillaries
of left lung

Right atrium

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Pulmonary
artery

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s10

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

10

Capillaries
of right lung

Aorta
3

Pulmonary vein

3
4
5

1
7

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava

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Capillaries
of left lung

Right atrium

O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

Pulmonary
artery

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

Figure 23.3-s11

Capillaries of
head, chest,
and arms

Superior
vena cava
Pulmonary
artery

10

Capillaries
of right lung

Aorta
3

4
5

Pulmonary vein
Left atrium
Left ventricle

Right ventricle
Inferior
vena cava

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11

O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

Capillaries
of left lung

Pulmonary vein
Right atrium

Pulmonary
artery

Capillaries of
abdominal region
and legs

How the Heart Works


The human heart
is a muscular organ about the size of a fist,
is located under the breastbone, and
has four chambers that
support double circulation and
prevent oxygen-rich and oxygen-poor blood of each
circuit from mixing.

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Figure 23.4

To body

O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

From
body
Left
lung

Right
lung

Right atrium

Left atrium
Valves

Valves

Right
ventricle
From body
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Left
ventricle

The Cardiac Cycle


The cardiac muscles of the heart relax and contract
rhythmically in what is called the cardiac cycle.
One heart beat makes up a complete circuit of the
cardiac cycle.
In a healthy adult at rest, the number of beats per
minute, or heart rate, ranges between 60 and 100.
You can measure your heart rate by taking your
pulse, which is the stretching of arteries with each
heartbeat.

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The Cardiac Cycle


The relaxation phase of the heart cycle is known as
diastole; the contraction phase is called systole.
As it beats, the heart makes a distinctive lubbdupp, lubb-dupp sound.
Valves prevent backflow and keep blood moving in
the right direction.
A heart murmur indicates a defect in one or more of
the valves.

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Figure 23.5-s1

1 Heart is relaxed.
Blood flows in.

DIASTOLE

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0.4
sec

Figure 23.5-s2

2 Atria contract.
Blood is forced into ventricles.

1 Heart is relaxed.
Blood flows in.

0.1
sec

DIASTOLE

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0.4
sec

SYSTOLE

Figure 23.5-s3

2 Atria contract.
Blood is forced into ventricles.

1 Heart is relaxed.
Blood flows in.

0.1
sec

0.8 sec

DIASTOLE

0.4
sec

3 Ventricles contract.
Blood is pumped out.
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0.3
sec

SYSTOLE

The Pacemaker and the Control of Heart Rate


The pacemaker, or SA (sinoatrial) node, is made
up of specialized muscle tissue in the wall of the
right atrium that generates electrical impulses,
which spread quickly through the walls of both
atria, prompting the atria to contract at the same
time.

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Figure 23.6-1

Right
atrium
Right
ventricle

Left atrium
Electrical
impulses

Left
ventricle

(a) The hearts natural pacemaker


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The Pacemaker and the Control of Heart Rate


The impulses then pass to a relay point that delays
the signals by about 0.1 second, allowing the atria
to empty before the impulses are passed to the
ventricles.
Impulses cause the ventricles to contract strongly,
driving the blood out of the heart.
The hearts pacemaker directs muscles of the heart
to beat faster or slower under the influence of a
variety of signals.

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The Pacemaker and the Control of Heart Rate


Sometimes the hearts pacemaker fails to
coordinate the electrical impulses, and the muscles
of the heart contract out of sync, producing an
erratic heart rhythm.
If a heart continually fails to maintain a normal
rhythm, an artificial pacemaker that emits rhythmic
electrical signals can be surgically implanted into
cardiac muscle to maintain a normal heartbeat.

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Figure 23.6-2

Wire leading to
Heart
heart pacemaker

(b) Artificial pacemaker


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Artificial
pacemaker

Blood Vessels
If the heart is the bodys pump, then the
plumbing is the system of arteries, veins, and
capillaries.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart.
Veins carry blood toward the heart.
Capillaries allow for exchange between the
bloodstream and tissue cells (via interstitial fluid).

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Blood Vessels
All blood vessels are lined by a thin layer of tightly
packed epithelial cells.
Structural differences in the walls of the different
kinds of blood vessels correlate with their different
functions.

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Blood Vessels
Veins convey blood back to the heart at low
velocity and pressure after the blood has passed
through capillary beds.
Veins (but not arteries) also have one-way valves
that prevent backflow, ensuring that blood always
moves toward the heart.

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Figure 23.7

From heart

To heart

Epithelium

Valve
Epithelium

Epithelium
Smooth
muscle

Smooth
muscle

Connective
tissue
Connective
tissue

Artery

Venule

Arteriole
Capillary
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Vein

Blood Flow through Arteries


Blood pressure is the force that blood exerts
against the walls of your arteries.
Blood pressure pushes blood from the heart through
the arteries, arterioles, and capillary beds.
Blood pressure is recorded as two numbers, such
as 120/80 (120 over 80).
The first number is blood pressure during systole,
when the ventricles contract.
The second number is the blood pressure that
remains in the arteries during diastole, when the
elastic walls of the arteries snap back.
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Blood Flow through Arteries


Optimal blood pressure for adults is
below 120 systolic and
below 80 diastolic.

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Blood Flow through Arteries


High blood pressure, or hypertension, is persistent
systolic blood pressure higher than 140 and/or
diastolic blood pressure higher than 90.
Hypertension is sometimes called a silent killer
because it often displays no outward symptoms for
years while increasing the risks of heart disease, a
heart attack, or a stroke.

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Blood Flow through Capillary Beds


The most important function of the circulatory
system is the chemical exchange between the
blood and tissue cells within capillary beds.
The walls of capillaries are thin and leaky.
Consequently, as blood enters a capillary at the
arterial end, blood pressure pushes fluid rich in O2,
nutrients, and other molecules out of the capillary
and into the interstitial fluid.

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Figure 23.8

Tissue cell
Capillary
Red blood cell
Fro
m

art
ery

Diffusion of O2
and nutrients
out of capillary
and into
tissue cells

LM

in
ve

(a) Capillaries

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To vein
To

Interstitial
fluid

(b) Chemical exchange

Diffusion of
CO2 and
wastes out
of tissue
cells and
into capillary

Figure 23.8-1

Capillary

LM

Red blood cell

(a) Capillaries

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Figure 23.8-2

Tissue cell

Fro
m

a rt
ery

Diffusion of O2
and nutrients
out of capillary
and into
tissue cells

To vein
To

Interstitial
fluid

in
ve

(b) Chemical exchange


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Diffusion of
CO2 and
wastes out
of tissue
cells and
into capillary

Blood Flow through Capillary Beds


Blood flows continuously through capillaries in your
most vital organs, such as the brain, heart, kidneys,
and liver.
In many other sites, the blood supply varies as
blood is diverted from one part of the body to
another, depending on need.

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Blood Return through Veins


After molecules are exchanged between the blood
and body cells, blood flows
from the capillaries into small venules,
then into larger veins, and
finally to the inferior and superior venae cavae, the
two large blood vessels that flow into the heart.

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Blood Return through Veins


By the time blood enters the veins, the pressure
originating from the heart has dropped to near zero.
The blood still moves through veins, even against
the force of gravity, because veins are sandwiched
between skeletal muscles.
As these muscles contract (when you walk, for
example), they squeeze the blood along.

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Figure 23.9

To heart

Valve (open)

Skeletal muscle

Valve (closed)

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Blood Return through Veins


After a while without contracting muscles, a person
will start to become weak and dizzy and could even
faint because gravity prevents blood from returning
to the heart in sufficient amounts to supply the
brain with oxygen.
Over time, leg veins may stretch and enlarge and
the valves within them weaken. As a result, veins
just under the skin can become visibly swollen, a
condition called varicose veins.

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Blood
The circulatory system of an adult human has
about 5 L of blood.
Just over half this volume consists of a yellowish
liquid called plasma, consisting of water and
dissolved salts, proteins, and various other
molecules, such as nutrients, wastes, and
hormones.

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Blood
Suspended within the plasma are three types of
cellular elements:
1. red blood cells,
2. white blood cells, and
3. platelets.

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Figure 23.10

55%
Blood
is spun.

Plasma: water and


dissolved substances
White blood cells

Platelets
45%
Red blood cells

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Figure 23.10-1

55%

Plasma: water and


dissolved substances
White blood cells

Platelets
45%
Red blood cells

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Figure 23.10-2

Blood
is spun.

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Structure/Function: Red Blood Cells


Red blood cells, also called erythrocytes, are by
far the most numerous type of blood cell.
Each red blood cell contains approximately 250
million molecules of hemoglobin, an ironcontaining protein that transports oxygen.
As red blood cells pass through the capillary beds of
your lungs, oxygen diffuses into them and binds to
the hemoglobin.

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Structure/Function: Red Blood Cells


This process is reversed in the capillaries of the
systemic circuit, where the hemoglobin unloads its
cargo of oxygen to the bodys cells.
Human red blood cells
are shaped like disks with indentations in the middle,
increasing the surface area available for gas
exchange, and
lack nuclei and other organelles, leaving more room
to carry hemoglobin.

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Structure/Function: Red Blood Cells


Anemia is a condition in which there is an
abnormally low amount of hemoglobin or a low
number of red blood cells.
The kidneys produce a hormone called
erythropoietin (EPO) that stimulates the bone
marrows production of oxygen-carrying red blood
cells.

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Blood Doping
Athletes sometimes abuse synthetic EPO to
enhance their blood oxygen level, a practice
referred to as blood doping.
Blood doping is difficult to detect because EPO is a
hormone produced naturally by the body and
because synthetic EPO is rapidly cleared from the
bloodstream.

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The Process of Science: Live High, Train Low?


Observation: It is difficult to train at low altitude
(near sea level) and then compete at high altitude.
Question: Will athletes who live for a time at high
altitude increase their performance when they train
and compete at lower altitudes?
Hypothesis: Living at high altitudes will boost red
blood cell production, which can then improve
stamina when training and competing at lower
altitudes.

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The Process of Science: Live High, Train Low?


Experiment:
Five elite athletes lived for 18 days in rooms that
were gradually adjusted to simulate an altitude of
3,000 meters (nearly 2 miles).
Six elite athletes lived for 18 days at an altitude of
1,200 meters.
All athletes trained at 1,200 meters.

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The Process of Science: Live High, Train Low?


Results:
At the start of the study, both groups were similar in
their aerobic capacity, a measure of the bodys
ability to take in and use oxygen.
By the end of the training regimen 18 days later, the
live high, train low group had a higher aerobic
capacity that gradually fell over two weeks.

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Figure 23.11

Aerobic capacity
in liters O2/minute

10.0
8.0
6.0
4.0

4.1

4.1

4.0

4.4

4.2

4.1

2.0
0
Control

18
Day of experiment

Live high, train low


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33

White Blood Cells and Defense


White blood cells (leukocytes)
contain nuclei and other organelles,
are larger and lack hemoglobin,
are less abundant than red blood cells, but
temporarily increase in number when the body is
combating an infection.

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Figure 23.12

CELLULAR COMPONENTS OF BLOOD


Platelets
(bits of membrane-enclosed
cytoplasm that aid clotting)

White Blood Cells


(cells that fight infection)

Colorized SEM

Red Blood Cells


(cells that carry oxygen)

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Colorized SEM

Colorized SEM

Colorized SEM

Fibrin

Red blood cell

Figure 23.12-1

Colorized SEM

Red Blood Cells


(cells that carry oxygen)

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Figure 23.12-2

Colorized SEM

White Blood Cells


(cells that fight infection)

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Figure 23.12-3

Colorized SEM

Platelets
(bits of membrane-enclosed
cytoplasm that aid clotting)

Colorized SEM

Fibrin

Red blood cell


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Platelets and Blood Clotting


Blood contains two components that help form
clots: platelets and fibrinogen.
1.

Platelets are bits of membrane pinched off from


larger cells in the bone marrow.

2.

Platelets also release clotting factors, molecules


that convert fibrinogen, a protein found in
the
plasma, to a threadlike protein called
fibrin.
Molecules of fibrin form a dense network
to
create a patch.

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Platelets and Blood Clotting


In the inherited disease hemophilia, excessive and
sometimes fatal bleeding can occur from even
minor cuts and bruises.
Hemophilia is caused by a genetic mutation in one
of several genes that code for clotting factors.

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Platelets and Blood Clotting


Too much or too little clotting can be lifethreatening.
An embolus is a blood clot that forms within a blood
vessel and then dislodges from that point of origin
and travels elsewhere in the body via the blood.
An embolus that blocks blood flow to the heart may
cause a heart attack, and an embolus in the brain
may cause a stroke.
The inability to form clots is also dangerous. In the
disease hemophilia, a genetic mutation in a gene for
a clotting factor results in excessive, sometimes
fatal, bleeding.
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Figure 9.28

Queen
Victoria

Albert

Alice

Louis

Alexandra

Czar
Nicholas II
of Russia

Alexis

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Donating Blood Components


Excessive bleeding and certain diseases can be
treated through blood transfusion, the process by
which blood is intravenously (through veins)
transferred from one person into another.
Transfusion is only possible because of whole or
partial blood donation.

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Donating Blood Components


When whole blood is donated, all the components
(plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, and
platelets) are collected and then separated.
Partial blood donation is possible.
In the procedure apheresis, only platelets or plasma
is removed from a donors blood. The remaining
blood components are returned to the donors
circulation.
Apheresis is used to collect stem cells, too.

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Figure 9.20

Blood
Group
(PhenoGenotypes
type)
A

IA IA

or

Red Blood Cells

Antibodies
Present in
Blood

Carbohydrate
A

Anti-B

Carbohydrate
B

Anti-A

I i

IB IB

or

IB i

AB

IA IB

ii

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Anti-A
Anti-B

Reactions When Blood from Groups


Below Is Mixed with Antibodies from
Groups at Left
B
A
AB
O

Donating Blood Components


Leukemia, a type of cancer that originates in the
cells of bone marrow, can be treated with stem
cells.
Matching bone marrow cell type between two
unrelated individuals is complicated because of an
extreme diversity in the proteins on the surface of
bone marrow cells.

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Cardiovascular Disease
Diseases of the heart and blood vessels are
collectively called cardiovascular disease, and
they account for 1 in 3 deaths in the United States.
Coronary arteries are the vessels that supply
oxygen-rich blood to the heart muscle.

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Figure 23.13

Aorta
Coronary artery
(supplies oxygen
to the heart muscle)

Dead muscle
tissue

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Blockage

Cardiovascular Disease
Chronic disease of the coronary and other arteries
throughout the body is called atherosclerosis, in
which plaque develops in the inner walls of
arteries.
When a coronary artery becomes partially blocked
by plaque, a person may feel occasional chest pain,
a condition called angina.
If the coronary artery becomes fully blocked, heart
muscle cells quickly die.

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Figure 23.14

Passageway
for blood

Partially blocked
passageway

Plaque

Normal artery

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Artery partially blocked by plaque

Figure 23.14-1

Passageway
for blood

Normal artery

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Figure 23.14-2

Partially blocked
passageway

Plaque

Artery partially blocked by plaque

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Cardiovascular Disease
Approximately one-third of heart attack victims die
almost immediately.
For those who survive, the ability of the damaged
heart to pump blood may be seriously impaired for
life because heart muscle cannot be replaced or
repaired.
Certain drugs can lower the risk of developing clots.
Angioplasty is the insertion of a tiny catheter with a
balloon that is inflated to compress the plaque and
widen clogged arteries.

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Figure 23.15

Angioplasty with stent insertion


Balloon inside stent

Catheter

Artery
Plaque
causing
blockage

Bypass

Plaque
causing
blockage
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Vein

Blood
flow

Balloon expanded

Stent

Cardiovascular Disease
A stent, a small wire mesh tube that props open an
artery, is often inserted during the angioplasty
process.
Bypass surgery is a much more drastic remedy. In
this procedure, a vein is removed from a patients
leg and is sewn onto the heartshunting blood
around the clogged artery.

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Cardiovascular Disease
Cardiovascular disease involves inherited factors
but can be reduced by
not smoking,
exercising regularly, and
eating a healthy diet high in fruits, vegetables, and
whole grains.

The death rate from cardiovascular disease in the


United States has been cut in half during the past
50 years.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


Cellular respiration
uses oxygen and glucose and
produces water, carbon dioxide, and energy in the
form of ATP.

All working cells therefore require a steady supply


of O2 from the environment and must continuously
dispose of CO2.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


The respiratory system consists of several organs
that facilitate exchange of O2 and CO2 between the
environment and cells.
The part of an animal where O2 from the
environment diffuses into living cells and CO 2
diffuses out to the surrounding environment is
called the respiratory surface.

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Figure 23.UN01

CO2

O2
Environment
Cell
C6H12O6
Glucose

2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

6 O2
Oxygen

Cellular
respiration

6 CO2

6 H2O

ATP

Carbon
dioxide

Water

Energy

Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


The respiratory surface usually has three major
characteristics:
1. It is covered with a single layer of living cells,
2. it is thin, and
3. it is moist.
. These characteristics allow rapid diffusion between
the body and the environment.
. Additionally, there must be enough surface area to
take up O2 for every cell in the body.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


Within the animal kingdom, a variety of respiratory
surfaces have evolved.
For some animals, such as sponges and flatworms,
the plasma membrane of every cell in the body is
close enough to the outside environment for gases
to diffuse in and out.
Some animals, such as leeches, earthworms, and
frogs, use their entire outer skin as a respiratory
surface.

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Figure 23.16

THE DIVERSITY OF RESPIRATORY ORGANS


Skin
(entire body surface)

Tracheae
(branching
internal tubes)

Gills
(extensions of the
body surface)

Tracheae
(internal
tubes)

Gills

Sea slug

Leech

Stinkbug

O2

O2

Respiratory
surface
(skin)

Lungs
(internal sacs)
Opossum
CO2 O2

CO2
CO2

Lungs
(localized
internal organs)

O2
CO2

O2

CO2

Respiratory
Capillary surface
(gills)

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Respiratory
Respiratory
No
Capillary surface
capillaries surface
(tracheae)
(lungs)

Capillary

Figure 23.16-1

Skin
(entire body surface)

Gills
(extensions of the
body surface)
Gills

Leech

Sea slug
CO2

CO2
O2

Respiratory
surface
(skin)
2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

O2

Respiratory
Capillary surface
(gills)

Capillary

Figure 23.16-2

Tracheae
(branching
internal tubes)

Lungs
(localized
internal organs)

Tracheae
(internal
tubes)

Stinkbug

Lungs
(internal sacs)
Opossum
CO2 O2

O2

CO2

O2

CO2

Respiratory
No
Respiratory
capillaries surface
surface
(tracheae)
(lungs)
2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Capillary

Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


For most animals, however, the outer surface is
either impermeable to gases or lacks sufficient
surface area to exchange gases for the whole
body.
In such animals, specialized regions of the body
surface have extensively folded or branched
tissues that provide a large respiratory surface area
for gas exchange.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


Gills are outfoldings of the body surface that
are suspended in water and
are found in most aquatic animals, such as fishes,
which are vertebrates, and lobsters and sea slugs,
which are invertebrates.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


In most land-dwelling animals,
the respiratory surfaces are folded into the body and
the infolded surfaces are open to the air only
through narrow tubes.

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Unifying Concepts of Animal Respiration


Insects breathe using a tracheal system, an
extensive network of branching internal tubes
called tracheae.
Lungs are localized organs lined with moist
epithelium and the most common respiratory
surface among snails, some spiders, and terrestrial
vertebrates such as amphibians, birds and other
reptiles, and mammals.
Gases are carried between the lungs and the body
cells by the circulatory system.

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The Human Respiratory System


The human respiratory system has three phases of
gas exchange:
1.

breathing, the ventilation of the lungs by


alternate inhalation and exhalation,

2.

transport of oxygen from the lungs to the rest of


the body via the circulatory system, and

3.

diffusion of oxygen from red blood cells into


body cells.

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Figure 23.17

O2

1 Breathing

CO2
Lung

2 Transport of gases by
the circulatory system
Circulatory system

3 Exchange of gases
with body cells
O2
CO2
Capillary
Cell
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Mitochondria

The Path of Air


Air enters the respiratory system through the
nostrils and mouth.
In the nasal cavity, the air is filtered by hairs and
mucus, warmed, humidified, and sampled by smell
receptors.
The air passes to the pharynx, where the digestive
and respiratory systems meet.

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Figure 23.18-1

Pharynx
Nasal cavity

Esophagus
Larynx (voice box)

Left lung

Trachea (windpipe)
Right lung
Bronchus
Bronchiole
Diaphragm
Heart

(a) Overview of the human respiratory system


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The Path of Air


From the pharynx, air is inhaled into the larynx
(voice box) and then into the trachea (windpipe).
The trachea forks into two bronchi (singular,
bronchus), one leading to each lung.
Within the lungs, each bronchus branches
repeatedly into finer and finer tubes called
bronchioles.

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The Path of Air


The bronchioles dead-end in grapelike clusters of
air sacs called alveoli (singular, alveolus).
Each of your lungs contains millions of these tiny
sacs that provide about 50 times more surface area
than your skin.
The inner surface of each alveolus is lined with a
layer of epithelial cells, where the exchange of
gases actually takes place.

2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Figure 23.18-2

To
heart
O2-rich
blood

From
heart
O2-poor
blood

Bronchiole
O2CO2
2
OCO
2

Alveoli
Blood
capillaries

(b) The structure of alveoli


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The Path of Air


The tiny alveoli are delicate and easily damaged,
and after age 20 they are not replaced.
Destruction of alveoli (usually by smoking, but also
by involuntary exposure to air pollution) causes the
lung disease emphysema.

As the air we have been following reaches its final


destination, O2 enters the bloodstream by diffusing
from the air into a web of blood capillaries that
surrounds each alveolus.

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The Path of Air


Your exhale reverses the process: CO2 diffuses
from blood in your capillaries into the alveoli and
then moves through your bronchioles, bronchus,
trachea, and out of your body.
The circulatory and respiratory systems function
together to transport this waste from individual cells
to the environment.

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Information Flow: The Brains Control over


Breathing
Breathing is the alternating process of
inhalation and
exhalation.

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Figure 23.19

Rib cage
expands as
rib muscles
contract.

Air
inhaled

Rib cage gets


smaller as
rib muscles
relax.

Air
exhaled

Lung
Diaphragm
contracts
(moves
down)
Inhalation
(Air pressure is higher in
atmosphere than in lungs.)

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Diaphragm
relaxes
(moves up)
Exhalation
(Air pressure is lower in
atmosphere than in lungs.)

Information Flow: The Brains Control over


Breathing
During inhalation, the chest is expanded by the
upward movement of the ribs and
downward movement of the diaphragm, a sheet of
muscle.

Air moves into the lungs by negative pressure


breathing, as the air pressure in the lungs is
lowered by the expansion of the chest cavity.

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Information Flow: The Brains Control over


Breathing
During exhalation, the rib and diaphragm muscles
relax, decreasing the volume of the chest cavity.
This decreased volume increases the air pressure
inside the lungs, forcing air to rush out of the
respiratory system.
You can consciously speed up or slow down your
breathing.

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Information Flow: The Brains Control over


Breathing
Most of the time, nerves from breathing control
centers in the brainstem maintain a respiratory rate
of 1014 inhalations per minute.
This rate can vary, however, like when you exercise.
Figure 23.20 highlights one respiratory control
system.

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Figure 23.20-s1

Brain

Stimulus:
CO2 levels in
the blood rise
as a result of
exercise.

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Figure 23.20-s2

Brain

Stimulus:
CO2 levels in
the blood rise
as a result of
exercise.

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Breathing
control
centers
Breathing control
centers in the brain
monitor the rising CO2
levels in the blood.

Figure 23.20-s3

Brain

Stimulus:
CO2 levels in
the blood rise
as a result of
exercise.

Breathing
control
centers
Breathing control
centers in the brain
monitor the rising CO2
levels in the blood.

Rib muscles
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Diaphragm

Response:
Nerve signals trigger
contraction of
muscles to increase
breathing rate and
depth.

The Role of Hemoglobin in Gas Transport


The human respiratory system takes O2 into the
body and expels CO2, but it relies on the circulatory
system to shuttle these gases between the lungs
and the bodys cells.

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Animation: CO2 From Blood to Lungs

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Animation: CO2 From Tissues to Blood

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Animation: O2 From Blood to Tissues

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Animation: O2 From Lungs to Blood

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Figure 23.21

O2 in
inhaled air

CO2 in
exhaled air
Air spaces
Alveolus
CO2

O2

CO

O2

Capillaries
of lung

CO2-rich,
O2-poor
blood
Heart
Tissue
COcapillaries 2
O
2

CO2

Interstitial
fluid

O2-rich,
CO2-poor
blood

O2

Tissue cells throughout body


2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Figure 23.21-1

O2 in
inhaled air

CO2 in
exhaled air
Air spaces
Alveolus
CO2

O2

CO
2

O2

Capillaries
of lung

CO2-rich,
O2-poor
blood

O2-rich,
CO2-poor
blood
Heart

2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Figure 23.21-2

CO
2

O2

Capillaries
of lung

CO2-rich,
O2-poor
blood

Heart
Tissue
C capillaries
O

O2-rich,
CO2-poor
blood

O2

Interstitial fluid
CO2

O2

Tissue cells throughout body


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The Role of Hemoglobin in Gas Transport


But there is a problem with this simple scheme.
Oxygen does not readily dissolve in blood, so O2
does not tend to move from the air into the blood on
its own.
The oxygen binds to hemoglobin, which consists of
four polypeptide chains.
Hemoglobin
loads up on oxygen in the lungs,
transports it through the blood, and
unloads it at the bodys cells.
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Figure 23.22

Colorized SEM

Each red blood cell Iron


contains 250 million
molecules of
hemoglobin

Artery

Red
blood cells

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Heme
group

Hemoglobin molecule

Polypeptide

Colorized SEM

Figure 23.22-1

Artery

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Red
blood cells

Figure 23.22-2

Each red blood cell Iron


contains 250 million
molecules of
hemoglobin

Heme
group

Polypeptide

Hemoglobin molecule
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The Role of Hemoglobin in Gas Transport


A shortage of iron causes less hemoglobin to be
produced by the body.
Iron deficiency is the most common cause of
anemia.

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The Role of Hemoglobin in Gas Transport


CO is a colorless, odorless, poisonous gas that can
bind to hemoglobin, even more tightly than O 2
does.
Breathing CO can therefore interfere with the
delivery of O2 to body cells, blocking cellular
respiration and causing rapid death.
Despite its potentially deadly effects, millions of
Americans willingly inhale CO in the form of
cigarette smoke.

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Smoking Damages the Structure and Function


of the Lungs
Every breath you take exposes your respiratory
tissues to potentially damaging chemicals.
One of the worst sources of air pollution is cigarette
smoke.
More than 4,000 different chemicals are contained
in cigarette smoke, many of which are known to be
toxic and even potentially deadly.

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Smoking Damages the Structure and Function


of the Lungs
Smoking slowly damages the respiratory system
and leads to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD), characterized by
a chronic cough and difficulty breathing,
irritated and swollen epithelial tissue lining the
bronchioles, and
damaged alveoli in which the walls lose their
elasticity, affecting their ability to expel air.

With fewer alveoli and less surface area, gas


exchange decreases.
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Smoking Damages the Structure and Function


of the Lungs
The health statistics associated with smoking are
staggering.
Almost 20% of American adults smoke.
Smoking and secondary exposure are responsible
for about 1 in 5 deaths every year in the United
States, more than all the deaths caused by
accidents,
alcohol and drug abuse,
HIV, and
murders combined.
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Smoking Damages the Structure and Function


of the Lungs
One in two American smokers will die from their
habit.
Smokers account for 8090% of all cases of lung
cancer, one of the deadliest forms of cancer.
Only 15% of people diagnosed with lung cancer
survive five years.
Lung cancer kills more Americans than any other
form of cancer by a wide margin.

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Figure 23.23

(a) Healthy lung (nonsmoker)

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(b) Cancerous lung (smoker)

Figure 23.23-1

(a) Healthy lung (nonsmoker)

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Figure 23.23-2

(b) Cancerous lung (smoker)

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Smoking Damages the Structure and Function


of the Lungs
There is no lifestyle choice that can have a more
positive impact on your long-term health (and the
health of the people you live with) than not
smoking.

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Evolution Connection: Evolving Endurance


Conditioning can boost athletic endurance by
improving the ability of the circulatory and
respiratory systems to deliver oxygen to muscles.

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Figure 23.24

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Evolution Connection: Evolving Endurance


Tibetans
live and work at altitudes above 13,000 feet,
have evolved the ability to thrive at high altitude,
and
have a higher frequency of versions of genes that
are otherwise rare in low-dwelling Chinese groups
and
are known to contribute to the functioning of the
circulatory and respiratory systems.

2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Figure 23.2

CO2
O2
CO2
Lung

CO2
Lung

O2

O2
Heart
O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood

(a) Pulmonary circuit


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O2
CO2

(b) Systemic circuit

Figure 23.6

Wire leading to
heart pacemaker

1
Right
atrium

Left atrium
Electrical
impulses

Right
ventricle

Left
ventricle

(a) The hearts natural pacemaker

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Heart

(b) Artificial pacemaker

Artificial
pacemaker

Figure 23.18

Pharynx
Nasal cavity

Esophagus
Larynx (voice box)

Left lung

Trachea (windpipe)

O2-rich
blood

Right lung
Bronchus

From
heart
O2-poor
blood

Bronchiole

Bronchiole

O2 CO2

Diaphragm
Heart

(a) Overview of the human respiratory system

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To
heart

Alveoli
Blood
capillaries

(b) The structure of alveoli

Figure 23.UN02

CO2

Pulmonary
arteries

O2

Capillaries
Pulmonary circuit

Pulmonary
veins

Heart
Aorta

Venae cavae
Veins

Systemic circuit

Venules

O2-rich blood
O2-poor blood
2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Arteries
Arterioles

Capillaries

Figure 23.UN03

From
lungs

To
lungs
Pulmonary
arteries
Right
atrium
From
body

Pulmonary
veins

Left
atrium

Venae
cavae
Aorta
Right
ventricle

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Left
ventricle

To
body

Figure 23.UN04

Capillary

Epithelium

Valve

Smooth
muscle
Connective
tissue
Artery

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Vein

Figure 23.UN05

CELLULAR COMPONENTS OF BLOOD

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Platelets
(allow for blood clotting)

SEM

SEM

White Blood Cells


(fight infections)

SEM

Red Blood Cells


(transport oxygen)

Figure 23.UN06

CO2

O2

O2
CO2

Bronchus

Bronchiole

Alveolus
Lung

CO2
From heart

2016 Pearson Education, Inc.

Capillaries

O2
To heart

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