CIRCULATION
I. Circulatory system
A. Open versus closed systems. Arthropods and most mollusks have open systems and a peristaltic tube heart. An open system is where the blood comes in direct contact with the cells. "White" blood cells exist, and also cells looking much like red blood cells exist, but the function of the latter is unknown.
II. Closed system - anatomy
A. Closed system circulation (where blood is always contained in vessels):
1. Artery carries blood from heart , vein is carrying blood to heart.
2. Path: Aorta---> arteries---> arterioles -----> capillaries---> venules---> veins---> vena cava---> right atrium---> right ventricle---> pulmonary artery---> lung capillary bed---> pulmonary vein---> left atrium---> left ventricle---> aorta--->
3. Portal system: where a capillary bed is encountered, blood is gathered into veins and then again distributed to capillary bed without going through the heart. The second capillary bed is the portal system.
4. The largest number of networks are the capillaries.
5. The most amount of blood at any given time is found in the veins.(show transparency) Mall's work with dogs in 1888.
6. The highest blood pressure is in the arteries (aorta would have the most). The least blood pressure would be in the veins ( vena cava would have the least). (Actually, in a standing animal the arteries of the feet may have the highest pressure and the veins of the head the lowest.)
B. Evolution apparently had available to it early on tubes of endothelial cells with smooth muscle wrapped around these tubes , as we find these both in the digestive system and circulatory system. Elastin is laid down over these tubes to help maintain shape and elasticity.
1. From some of these muscles peristaltic like action
results.
C. Capillaries - at any given time, a high percentage of capillaries do not have blood flowing through them.
1. The rate, and even direction, of blood flow through these are always changing constantly. Yet capillaries are unique in that they have no muscle cells. Often a single layer of 1-4 µm thick endothelial cells.
2. The capillary diameter is small, even sometimes smaller than the 7 µm diameter of the red blood cells.
3. Highly permeable to gases, nutrients and even water. Only erythrocytes and proteins tend to be held back.
a. Blood pressure is always forcing water out.
b. Osmotic pressure is always pulling water back in.
c. The lymphatic system picks up any water that is not drawn back in.
D. Arterioles
1. Often a sphincter muscle at the junction of arterioles and capillaries.
2. The sphincter muscle is a smooth muscle that controls flow of blood into the capillaries.
3. If all of these muscles were to relax, shock would result. (Shock : sudden loss of blood pressure) (Show how capillaries may have back flow).
E. Venules, veins and arteries.
1. All have muscle cells which control blood flow and pressure..
2. Veins
a. Longitudinal smooth muscle increases tension and blood pressure; circumventing muscle controls volume and flow.
b. Have valves to insure unidirectional flow of blood, since at this point blood pressure is much lower after having come out of the capillaries. The additional effect of gravity can cause negative pressure.
c. Oblong nature of veins helps in volume control
d. Striated muscular action is often important in getting blood back to the heart. (Soldiers standing at attention often faint).
F. Heart - must not only provide force but also direction.
1. Peristaltic pump
a. Annelid dorsal vessel pumps blood through a closed system.
b. Tube hearts of insects. Peristalsis always important although valves are found in some.
2. Hagfish hearts - found frequently and always prior to pumping into a capillary bed.
3. Valved heart of mammals:
a. Atria receive blood and pump it into the ventricles.
b. Ventricles must pump blood into a capillary bed and therefore are stronger.
c. Because of valves controlling the direction, only a single uniform contraction is needed.
d. Mammals essentially have two hearts found in the same location. The heart pumps blood to the body, the right heart pumps blood to the lungs.
e. Made of cardiac muscle.
f. See diagram for probable evolutionary development of the heart.
G. Muscle-vein pumping mechanism. Veins with valves arrange themselves in between skeletal muscles such that when the muscles contract blood is squeezed toward the heart. This helps facilitate movement of blood and increases venous blood pressure. (A similar system works for the lymphatic system.)
III. Heart rate control.
A. All heart cells inherently can generate their own rhythmic beat. The fastest of these are located in the sino-atrial node (SA node) on the right atrium.
1. Once the SA node "fires" (initiates an action potential leading to a contraction), this will stimulate the adjoining cells to fire before their own signal tells them to do so. Therefore the SA node is often referred to as the "pacemaker".
2. A wave of contraction emulates over the atria from the SA node.
B. This wave like response of one cell stimulating the next does not flow into the ventricular cells because their is an insulating layer of lipid material between the atria and ventricles. However, at this lipid barrier between the atria and ventricles is a small structure known as the atrio-ventricular node (AV node).
1. This node does receive the wave like stimulus started at the SA node.
2. Upon receiving this signal, the AV node delays for just a moment and then sends its own signal out to the ventricles via a special muscle-nerve type tissues called the BUNDLE OF HIS or bundle fibers.
3. The bundle of His terminates at the base of the ventricles and innate action potentials in another group of cells known as the PURKINJE FIBERS.
4. As the wave of action potentials travel from the base of the ventricles up, these action potentials stimulate the ventricular cells to contract.
C. This sequence allows for a coordinated heart beat: the SA node initiates the whole process---> the atria contract filling the ventricles ---> the AV node receives the signal and delays a moment thus allowing the ventricles to fill ---> the signal travels to the base of the ventricles from the AV node and initiates a wave of contraction of the ventricles from the base up ----> this forces the blood in the ventricles out into the arteries (aorta and pulmonary artery) located at the top of the ventricles.
D. Valves prevent back flow of blood into undesired areas.
IV. Adjustments to the inherent heart rate and strength. (Note that increased strength or increased rate does not necessarily translate to mean more blood to the tissues. Often considered is the concept of cardiac output = heart rate times the amount of blood pumped per beat (stroke volume). Thus the cardiac output has units of volume/time).
A. Medulla sends speeding or slowing signals to the heart via the sympathetic or parasympathetic nervous system respectively.
1. SYMPATHETIC NERVOUS SYSTEM - most of the nerves coming to the heart from the medulla terminate at the SA node. When stimulated they release norepinephrine (noradrenalin) from the nerve endings. Norepinephrine reduces the membrane potential (depolarizes) of the SA node cells and thus causes them to fire faster than their normal rate (strength per beat also increased). The norepinephrine depolarizes the cells by increasing the Na+ and Ca++ permeability via cyclic AMP.
2. Parasympathetic nerves (vagus nerve) follow the same scenario with the exceptions that acetylcholine is released which increases the membrane potential (hyperpolarizes because of increased facilitated diffusion of K+) thus leading to slower heart rate.
B. The medulla will send out these signals according to information it receives from many sources via nerves:
1. Carotid bodies and aortic bodies detecting oxygen levels.
2. Carbon dioxide-pH detectors located in the medulla itself which is indirectly sensing the CO2-pH levels in the blood around the brain.
3. Baroreceptors in the carotid arteries, aorta, and a few other minor places which detect blood pressure.
4. Hypothalmus detecting body temperature.
(a. Nicotinic receptors are one kind of acetylcholine receptor. These are the receptors that are predominant in skelatal muscle and lead to depolarization when acetylcholine binds and thus can stimulate an action potential. The drug nicotine can also bind to these receptors and elicit a response, hence their name. Some of these receptors exist in the heart.)
(b. Muscarinic receptors are another kind of acetylcholine receptor, and are predominant in smooth muscle. When acetylcholine binds to this type of receptor, there is an ion leakage such that there is usually a hyperpolarization, thus making it harder to generate an action potential and slowing down the heart rate. Muscarine is a drug from mushrooms that can mimic acetylcholine and hence bind to this type of receptor.)
c. The heart contains BOTH nicotinic and muscarinic receptors, with a predominance of muscarinic receptors. Acetylcholine generally slows down the heart, but not always given that both nicotinic and muscarinic receptors exist there, and because the effects of muscarinic receptors are not always so straight forward. Atropine is a drug that blocks the effect of an muscarinic receptor, and is often used to reactivate the heart when it stops.
C. Medulla (brain) can also stimulate the medulla
of the adrenal glands via the sympathetic nervous system which will cause
the release of epinephrine (adrenaline) which in turn will reach the heart
via the blood and cause an increased heart rate. In this type of response
the medulla often receives its signal from higher brain centers which are
anticipating some event that may require physical action (fight or flight
response).
1. Carotid bodies and aortic bodies detecting oxygen levels. Send out action potentials to the medulla of the brain when CO2 is high and O2 is low.
2. Carbon dioxide-pH detectors located in the medulla itself, which is indirectly sensing the CO2-pH levels in the blood around the brain.
3. Baroreceptors in the carotid arteries, aorta, and a few other minor places which detect blood pressure.
4. Hypothalmus detecting body temperature
D. STARLING EFFECT is a direct influence on the heart. More physical activity causes the muscle-vein pump system to come into action causing increased venous pressure.
a. Thus more blood enters the right atrium leading to it being stretched more than usual; in response the atrial muscle will contract harder.
b. The stretching of the right atrium also stretches the sinoatrial node making its membranes more leaky to ions making it easier to fire an action potential. The result is an increased rate.
V. Systemic control of the capillary beds.
A. Since capillaries have no smooth muscle, they themselves can not contract or dilate. However a small circular muscle around the arteriole just before entering the capillary bed can contract and dilate. It is these PRECAPILLARY SPHINCTERS (ARTERIOLE SPHINCTERS) that control blood flow in the capillaries of the body.
B. Because of the contraction of these arteriole sphincters, approximately 90% of capillaries in an animal body have no flowing blood at any given time. If all of these capillaries where open then there would be a catastrophic loss of body blood pressure.
C. Arteriole sphincters are highly responsive to epinephrine and norepinephrine released from the adrenals (which would be released on a systemic basis for the reasons mentioned above). However, the way in which the arterial sphincters react depends on where they are located in the body.
1. Skeletal muscle arteriole sphincters will relax in the presence of epinephrine and norepinephrine, thus increasing the blood supply to these skeletal muscles.
2. Smooth muscles (particularly of the digestive system) arteriole sphincters will contract in the presence of these same hormones thus leading to a decreased blood supply to the digestive system.
3. These are again responses which are part of the flight or fight response.
VI. Localized control - always mediated via the arteriole sphincters.
A. Increased carbon dioxide, decreased pH, and decreased oxygen can be directly detected by arteriole sphincters which will cause relaxation of these muscles and thus increased blood supply.
B. Histamine relaxes arteriole sphincters and leads to increased blood supply. Histamine is a localized hormone released by many tissues in response to injury. (this includes injury to overactive phagocytitic cells attacking the invasion of foreign molecules).
VII. Water loss from capillaries. Water (and all components of plasma except cells and proteins) is typically lost from capillaries given that they have thin walls and are under high pressure.
A. Most of this plasma like fluid is retrieved farther along in the capillary due to the osmotic pressure left in the blood because of the proteins left there (albumins).
B. Lymphatic System
1. Structure:
a. Lymphatic capillaries pick up fluids that have leaked out of blood capillaries due to high pressure. Theses lymphatic capillaries have blind endings (i.e. they do not complete a circuit).
b. Lymphatic vessels collect fluid from the lymphatic capillaries.
1a. Have valves.
2b. very similar to veins.
3c. require skeletal muscle action for movement of the lymphatic fluid.
c. Lymphatic vessels all collect and dump into the brachiocephalic veins via two ducts.
d. Lymph nodes are specialized areas of the lymphatic system primarily for agranulocyte formation.
e. Lacteals are lymphatic capillaries of the villi of the small intestine used to pick up fat droplets.
f. Lymphatic fluid is very much like plasma.
2. Disease
a. edema.(excess fluid in tissues)
1a. high blood pressure.
2b. muscular inactivity.
3c. malnutrition.
4d. elephantitis.