The Cardiovascular System: Prepared by Patty Bostwick-Taylor, Florence-Darlington Technical College

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PowerPoint® Lecture Slides

Prepared by Patty Bostwick-Taylor,


Florence-Darlington Technical College

CHAPTER 11
The
Cardiovascular
System
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Cardiovascular System

• A closed system of the heart and blood


vessels
• The heart pumps blood
• Blood vessels allow blood to circulate to all
parts of the body
• The functions of the cardiovascular system
• To deliver oxygen and nutrients to cells and
tissues
• To remove carbon dioxide and other waste
products from cells and tissues
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
The Heart

• Location
• Thorax between the lungs in the inferior
mediastinum
• Orientation
• Pointed apex directed toward left hip
• Base points toward right shoulder
• About the size of your fist

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Midsternal line
2nd rib
Sternum
Diaphragm Point of
maximal
intensity
(PMI)

(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.1a


Mediastinum

Heart
Left lung

Posterior
(b)
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.1b
Superior Aorta
vena cava Parietal
pleura (cut)
Pulmonary Left lung
trunk
Pericardium
(cut)
Apex of
heart
Diaphragm

(c)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.1c


Brachiocephalic trunk Left common carotid artery
Superior vena cava Left subclavian artery

Right pulmonary artery Aortic arch


Ligamentum arteriosum
Ascending aorta
Left pulmonary artery
Pulmonary trunk Left pulmonary veins

Right pulmonary Left atrium


veins
Auricle of left atrium
Right atrium
Circumflex artery
Right coronary artery
in coronary sulcus (right Left coronary artery in
atrioventricular groove) coronary sulcus (left
atrioventricular groove)
Anterior cardiac vein
Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Great cardiac vein
Marginal artery
Anterior interventricular
Small cardiac vein artery (in anterior
interventricular sulcus)
Inferior vena cava
Apex
(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3a


The Heart: Coverings
• Pericardium—a double-walled sac
• Fibrous pericardium is loose and superficial
• Serous membrane is deep to the fibrous
pericardium and composed of two layers
• Visceral pericardium
• Next to heart; also known as the
epicardium
• Parietal pericardium
• Outside layer that lines the inner surface
of the fibrous pericardium
• Serous fluid fills the space between the layers
of pericardium
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Pulmonary
trunk Fibrous pericardium
Parietal layer of serous
Pericardium pericardium
Pericardial cavity
Myocardium Epicardium
(visceral layer
of serous
pericardium) Heart
wall
Myocardium
Endocardium
Heart chamber

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.2


The Heart: Heart Wall
• Three layers
• Epicardium
• Outside layer
• This layer is the visceral pericardium
• Connective tissue layer
• Myocardium
• Middle layer
• Mostly cardiac muscle
• Endocardium
• Inner layer
• Endothelium
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Pulmonary
trunk Fibrous pericardium
Parietal layer of serous
Pericardium pericardium
Pericardial cavity
Myocardium Epicardium
(visceral layer
of serous
pericardium) Heart
wall
Myocardium
Endocardium
Heart chamber

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.2


Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


The Heart: Chambers
• Right and left side act as separate pumps
• Four chambers
• Atria
• Receiving chambers
• Right atrium
• Left atrium
• Ventricles
• Discharging chambers
• Right ventricle
• Left ventricle
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.
Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


Left
ventricle

Right
ventricle
Muscular
interventricular
septum
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.5
The Heart: Septa

• Interventricular septum
• Separates the two ventricles
• Interatrial septum
• Separates the two atria

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


The Heart’s Role in Blood Circulation

• Systemic circulation
• Blood flows from the left side of the heart
through the body tissues and back to the
right side of the heart
• Pulmonary circulation
• Blood flows from the right side of the heart
to the lungs and back to the left side of the
heart

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Capillary beds
of lungs where
gas exchange
occurs

Pulmonary Circuit
Pulmonary
arteries Pulmonary
veins
Venae Aorta and
cavae branches

Left
atrium

Left
Right ventricle
atrium Heart
Right
ventricle
Systemic Circuit

Capillary
beds of all
body tissues
KEY: where gas
Oxygen-rich, exchange
CO2-poor blood occurs
Oxygen-poor,
CO2-rich blood
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.4
The Heart: Valves
• Allow blood to flow in only one direction to prevent
backflow
• Four valves
• Atrioventricular (AV) valves—between atria and
ventricles
• Bicuspid (mitral) valve (left side of heart)
• Tricuspid valve (right side of heart)
• Semilunar valves—between ventricle and artery
• Pulmonary semilunar valve
• Aortic semilunar valve

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


The Heart: Valves
• AV valves
• Anchored in place by chordae tendineae (“heart
strings”)
• Open during heart relaxation and closed during
ventricular contraction
• Semilunar valves
• Closed during heart relaxation but open during
ventricular contraction
• Notice these valves operate opposite of one another
to force a one-way path of blood through the heart

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning
to the atria puts
pressure against
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open.

Ventricles

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 1


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning
to the atria puts
pressure against
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open.
2 As the ventricles
fill, AV valve flaps
hang limply into
ventricles.
Ventricles

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 2


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning
to the atria puts
pressure against
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open.
2 As the ventricles
fill, AV valve flaps
hang limply into
ventricles.
3 Atria contract, Ventricles
forcing additional
blood into ventricles.

AV valves open;
atrial pressure
greater than
ventricular pressure

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 3


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning 4 Ventricles contract,


to the atria puts forcing blood against
pressure against AV valve flaps.
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open.
2 As the ventricles
fill, AV valve flaps
hang limply into
ventricles.
3 Atria contract, Ventricles
forcing additional
blood into ventricles.

AV valves open;
atrial pressure
greater than
ventricular pressure

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 4


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning 4 Ventricles contract,


to the atria puts forcing blood against
pressure against AV valve flaps.
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open. 5 AV valves close.
2 As the ventricles
fill, AV valve flaps
hang limply into
ventricles.
3 Atria contract, Ventricles
forcing additional
blood into ventricles.

AV valves open;
atrial pressure
greater than
ventricular pressure

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 5


(a) Operation of the AV valves

1 Blood returning 4 Ventricles contract,


to the atria puts forcing blood against
pressure against AV valve flaps.
AV valves; the AV
valves are forced
open. 5 AV valves close.
2 As the ventricles 6 Chordae
fill, AV valve flaps tendineae tighten,
hang limply into preventing valve
ventricles. flaps from everting
into atria.
3 Atria contract, Ventricles
forcing additional
blood into ventricles.

AV valves open; AV valves closed;


atrial pressure atrial pressure
greater than less than
ventricular pressure ventricular pressure

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6a, step 6


(b) Operation of the semilunar valves
Pulmonary
trunk Aorta
1 As ventricles
contract and
intraventricular
pressure rises,
blood is pushed up
against semilunar
valves, forcing
them open.

Semilunar valves open

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6b, step 1


(b) Operation of the semilunar valves
Pulmonary
trunk Aorta
1 As ventricles 2 As ventricles
contract and relax and
intraventricular intraventricular
pressure rises, pressure falls,
blood is pushed up blood flows
against semilunar back from arteries,
valves, forcing filling the leaflets
them open. of semilunar
valves and forcing
them to close.

Semilunar valves open Semilunar valves closed

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.6b, step 2


Cardiac Circulation
• Blood in the heart chambers does not nourish the
myocardium
• The heart has its own nourishing circulatory system
consisting of
• Coronary arteries—branch from the aorta to supply the
heart muscle with oxygenated blood
• Cardiac veins—drain the myocardium of blood
• Coronary sinus—a large vein on the posterior of the
heart, receives blood from cardiac veins
• Blood empties into the right atrium via the coronary sinus

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Brachiocephalic trunk Left common carotid artery
Superior vena cava Left subclavian artery

Right pulmonary artery Aortic arch


Ligamentum arteriosum
Ascending aorta
Left pulmonary artery
Pulmonary trunk Left pulmonary veins

Right pulmonary Left atrium


veins
Auricle of left atrium
Right atrium
Circumflex artery
Right coronary artery
in coronary sulcus (right Left coronary artery in
atrioventricular groove) coronary sulcus (left
atrioventricular groove)
Anterior cardiac vein
Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Great cardiac vein
Marginal artery
Anterior interventricular
Small cardiac vein artery (in anterior
interventricular sulcus)
Inferior vena cava
Apex
(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3a


The Heart: Associated Great Vessels

• Arteries
• Aorta
• Leaves left ventricle
• Pulmonary arteries
• Leave right ventricle

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Associated Great Vessels

• Veins
• Superior and inferior venae cavae
• Enter right atrium
• Pulmonary veins (four)
• Enter left atrium

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Brachiocephalic trunk Left common carotid artery
Superior vena cava Left subclavian artery

Right pulmonary artery Aortic arch


Ligamentum arteriosum
Ascending aorta
Left pulmonary artery
Pulmonary trunk Left pulmonary veins

Right pulmonary Left atrium


veins
Auricle of left atrium
Right atrium
Circumflex artery
Right coronary artery
in coronary sulcus (right Left coronary artery in
atrioventricular groove) coronary sulcus (left
atrioventricular groove)
Anterior cardiac vein
Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Great cardiac vein
Marginal artery
Anterior interventricular
Small cardiac vein artery (in anterior
interventricular sulcus)
Inferior vena cava
Apex
(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3a


Blood Flow Through the Heart

• Superior and inferior venae cavae dump blood


into the right atrium
• From right atrium, through the tricuspid valve,
blood travels to the right ventricle
• From the right ventricle, blood leaves the heart
as it passes through the pulmonary semilunar
valve into the pulmonary trunk
• Pulmonary trunk splits into right and left
pulmonary arteries that carry blood to the lungs

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Blood Flow Through the Heart

• Oxygen is picked up and carbon dioxide is


dropped off by blood in the lungs
• Oxygen-rich blood returns to the heart through
the four pulmonary veins
• Blood enters the left atrium and travels
through the bicuspid valve into the left
ventricle
• From the left ventricle, blood leaves the heart
via the aortic semilunar valve and aorta

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Capillary beds
of lungs where
gas exchange
occurs

Pulmonary Circuit
Pulmonary
arteries Pulmonary
veins
Venae Aorta and
cavae branches

Left
atrium

Left
Right ventricle
atrium Heart
Right
ventricle
Systemic Circuit

Capillary
beds of all
body tissues
KEY: where gas
Oxygen-rich, exchange
CO2-poor blood occurs
Oxygen-poor,
CO2-rich blood
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.4
The Heart: Conduction System

• Intrinsic conduction system (nodal system)


• Heart muscle cells contract, without nerve
impulses, in a regular, continuous way

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Conduction System
• Special tissue sets the pace
• Sinoatrial node = SA node (“pacemaker”), is in the
right atrium
• Atrioventricular node = AV node, is at the junction
of the atria and ventricles
• Atrioventricular bundle = AV bundle (bundle of
His), is in the interventricular septum
• Bundle branches are in the interventricular septum
• Purkinje fibers spread within the ventricle wall
muscles

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior
vena cava
Sinoatrial (SA)
node (pacemaker) Left atrium

Atrioventricular
(AV) node

Right atrium Atrioventricular


(AV) bundle
(bundle of His)
Bundle branches
Purkinje fibers

Purkinje fibers Interventricular


septum

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.7


Heart Contractions

• Contraction is initiated by the sinoatrial node


(SA node)
• Sequential stimulation occurs at other
autorhythmic cells
• Force cardiac muscle depolarization in one
direction—from atria to ventricles

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Heart Contractions

• Once SA node starts the heartbeat


• Impulse spreads to the AV node
• Then the atria contract
• At the AV node, the impulse passes through
the AV bundle, bundle branches, and Purkinje
fibers
• Blood is ejected from the ventricles to the
aorta and pulmonary trunk as the ventricles
contract

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior
vena cava
Sinoatrial (SA)
node (pacemaker) Left atrium

Atrioventricular
(AV) node

Right atrium Atrioventricular


(AV) bundle
(bundle of His)
Bundle branches
Purkinje fibers

Purkinje fibers Interventricular


septum

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.7


Heart Contractions

• Homeostatic imbalance
• Heart block—damaged AV node releases
them from control of the SA node; result is in
a slower heart rate as ventricles contract at
their own rate
• Ischemia—lack of adequate oxygen supply
to heart muscle
• Fibrillation—a rapid, uncoordinated
shuddering of the heart muscle

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Heart Contractions

• Homeostatic imbalance (continued)


• Tachycardia—rapid heart rate over 100
beats per minute
• Bradycardia—slow heart rate less than 60
beats per minutes

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds

• Atria contract simultaneously


• Atria relax, then ventricles contract
• Systole = contraction
• Diastole = relaxation

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds

• Cardiac cycle—events of one complete heart


beat
• Mid-to-late diastole
• Pressure in heart is low
• Blood flows from passively into the atria
and into ventricles
• Semilunar valves are closed
• Atrioventricular valves are open
• Atria contract and force blood into ventricles

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds
• Cardiac cycle—events of one complete heart beat
• Ventricular systole
• Blood pressure builds before ventricle contracts
• Atrioventricular valves close causes first heart
sound, “lub”
• Semilunar valves open as blood pushes against
them
• Blood travels out of the ventricles through
pulmonary trunk and aorta
• Atria are relaxed

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Cardiac Cycle & Heart Sounds
• Cardiac cycle—events of one complete heart beat
• Early diastole
• At the end of systole, all four valves are briefly
closed at the same time
• Second heart sound is heard as semilunar
valves close, causing “dup” sound
• Atria finish refilling as pressure in the heart drops
• Ventricular pressure is low
• Atrioventricular valves open

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular Atrial Isovolumetric Ventricular Isovolumetric
filling contraction contraction phase ejection phase relaxation

1 2 3
Mid-to-late diastole Ventricular systole Early diastole
(ventricular filling) (atria in diastole)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular
filling

1
Mid-to-late diastole
(ventricular filling)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8, step 1a


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular Atrial
filling contraction

1
Mid-to-late diastole
(ventricular filling)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8, step 1b


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular Atrial Isovolumetric
filling contraction contraction phase

1 2
Mid-to-late diastole Ventricular systole
(ventricular filling) (atria in diastole)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8, step 2a


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular Atrial Isovolumetric Ventricular
filling contraction contraction phase ejection phase

1 2
Mid-to-late diastole Ventricular systole
(ventricular filling) (atria in diastole)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8, step 2b


Left atrium
Right atrium

Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Ventricular Atrial Isovolumetric Ventricular Isovolumetric
filling contraction contraction phase ejection phase relaxation

1 2 3
Mid-to-late diastole Ventricular systole Early diastole
(ventricular filling) (atria in diastole)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.8, step 3


The Heart: Cardiac Output
• Cardiac output (CO)
• Amount of blood pumped by each side (ventricle) of
the heart in one minute
• Stroke volume (SV)
• Volume of blood pumped by each ventricle in one
contraction (each heartbeat)
• Usually remains relatively constant
• About 70 mL of blood is pumped out of the left
ventricle with each heartbeat
• Heart rate (HR)
• Typically 75 beats per minute

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Cardiac Output

• CO = HR  SV
• CO = HR (75 beats/min)  SV (70 mL/beat)
• CO = 5250 mL/min
• Starling’s law of the heart—the more the
cardiac muscle is stretched, the stronger the
contraction
• Changing heart rate is the most common way
to change cardiac output

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Regulation of Heart Rate

• Increased heart rate


• Sympathetic nervous system
• Crisis
• Low blood pressure
• Hormones
• Epinephrine
• Thyroxine
• Exercise
• Decreased blood volume

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


The Heart: Regulation of Heart Rate

• Decreased heart rate


• Parasympathetic nervous system
• High blood pressure or blood volume
• Decreased venous return

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.9
Blood Vessels: The Vascular System

• Transport blood to the tissues and back


• Carry blood away from the heart
• Arteries
• Arterioles
• Exchanges between tissues and blood
• Capillary beds
• Return blood toward the heart
• Venules
• Veins

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


(a) Artery Vein
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.10a
Blood Vessels: Microscopic Anatomy

• Three layers (tunics)


• Tunic intima
• Endothelium
• Tunic media
• Smooth muscle
• Controlled by sympathetic nervous system
• Tunic externa
• Mostly fibrous connective tissue

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Valve
Tunica intima
• Endothelium
• Loose connective tissue
Internal elastic
lamina
Tunica media
• Smooth muscle
• Elastic fibers
External elastic lamina
Tunica externa
• Collagen fibers

Lumen Venule Lumen


Artery Arteriole Vein
Capillary
network

Basement membrane
Endothelial cells

(b)
Capillary
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.10b
Structural Differences Among Blood
Vessels
• Arteries have a thicker tunica media than veins
• Capillaries are only one cell layer (tunica intima)
to allow for exchanges between blood and
tissue
• Veins have a thinner tunica media than arteries
• Veins also have valves to prevent backflow of
blood
• Lumen of veins are larger than arteries

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Valve
Tunica intima
• Endothelium
• Loose connective tissue
Internal elastic
lamina
Tunica media
• Smooth muscle
• Elastic fibers
External elastic lamina
Tunica externa
• Collagen fibers

Lumen Venule Lumen


Artery Arteriole Vein
Capillary
network

Basement membrane
Endothelial cells

(b)
Capillary
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.10b
Venous Aids for the Return of Blood to
the Heart
• Veins:
• Have a thinner tunica media
• Operate under low pressure
• Have a larger lumen than arteries
• To assist in the movement of blood back to the
heart:
• Larger veins have valves to prevent backflow
• Skeletal muscle “milks” blood in veins toward
the heart

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Valve (open)

Contracted
skeletal
muscle

Valve (closed)

Vein

Direction of
blood flow

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.11


Movement of Blood Through Vessels

• Most arterial blood is pumped by the heart


• Veins use the milking action of muscles to
help move blood

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Capillary Beds

• Capillary beds consist of two types of vessels


• Vascular shunt—vessel directly connecting
an arteriole to a venule
• True capillaries—exchange vessels
• Oxygen and nutrients cross to cells
• Carbon dioxide and metabolic waste
products cross into blood

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Vascular shunt
Precapillary sphincters

True
capillaries
Terminal arteriole Postcapillary
venule
(a) Sphincters open; blood flows through true
capillaries.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.12a
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.12b
Major Arteries of System Circulation

• Aorta
• Largest artery in the body
• Leaves from the left ventricle of the heart
• Regions
• Ascending aorta—leaves the left ventricle
• Aortic arch—arches to the left
• Thoracic aorta—travels downward through the
thorax
• Abdominal aorta—passes through the
diaphragm into the abdominopelvic cavity

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Arteries of System Circulation

• Arterial branches of the ascending aorta


• Right and left coronary arteries serve the
heart

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Brachiocephalic trunk Left common carotid artery
Superior vena cava Left subclavian artery

Right pulmonary artery Aortic arch


Ligamentum arteriosum
Ascending aorta
Left pulmonary artery
Pulmonary trunk Left pulmonary veins

Right pulmonary Left atrium


veins
Auricle of left atrium
Right atrium
Circumflex artery
Right coronary artery
in coronary sulcus (right Left coronary artery in
atrioventricular groove) coronary sulcus (left
atrioventricular groove)
Anterior cardiac vein
Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Great cardiac vein
Marginal artery
Anterior interventricular
Small cardiac vein artery (in anterior
interventricular sulcus)
Inferior vena cava
Apex
(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3a


Major Arteries of Systemic Circulation
• Arterial branches of the aortia arch (BCS)
• Brachiocephalic trunk splits into the
• Right common carotid artery
• Right subclavian artery
• Left common carotid artery splits into the
• Left internal and external carotid arteries
• Left subclavian artery branches into the
• Vertebral artery
• In the axilla, the subclavian artery becomes the
axillary artery  brachial artery  radial and ulnar
arteries

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Arteries of Systemic Circulation

• Arterial branches of the thoracic aorta


• Intercostal arteries supply the muscles of the
thorax wall
• Other branches of the thoracic aorta supply
the
• Lungs (bronchial arteries)
• Esophagus (esophageal arteries)
• Diaphragm (phrenic arteries)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Arteries of Systemic Circulation

• Arterial branches of the abdominal aorta


• Celiac trunk is the first branch of the
abdominal aorta. Three branches are
• Left gastric artery (stomach)
• Splenic artery (spleen)
• Common hepatic artery (liver)
• Superior mesenteric artery supplies most of
the small intestine and first half of the large
intestine

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Arteries of Systemic Circulation

• Arterial branches of the abdominal aorta


• Left and right renal arteries (kidney)
• Left and right gonadal arteries
• Ovarian arteries in females serve the
ovaries
• Testicular arteries in males serve the
testes
• Lumbar arteries serve muscles of the
abdomen and trunk

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Arteries of Systemic Circulation

• Arterial branches of the abdominal aorta


• Inferior mesenteric artery serves the second
half of the large intestine
• Left and right common iliac arteries are the
final branches of the aorta
• Internal iliac arteries serve the pelvic organs
• External iliac arteries enter the thigh 
femoral artery  popliteal artery  anterior
and posterior tibial arteries

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Arteries of the head and trunk
Internal carotid artery
External carotid artery
Common carotid arteries
Vertebral artery Arteries that supply the upper limb
Subclavian artery Subclavian artery
Brachiocephalic trunk
Aortic arch Axillary artery
Ascending aorta
Coronary artery
Thoracic aorta
(above diaphragm) Brachial artery
Celiac trunk
Abdominal aorta
Superior mesenteric Radial artery
artery Ulnar artery
Renal artery
Gonadal artery
Deep palmar arch

Superficial palmar arch


Digital arteries

Inferior mesenteric artery Arteries that supply the lower limb


Common iliac artery
External iliac artery
Femoral artery
Popliteal artery
Internal iliac artery

Anterior tibial artery


Posterior tibial artery

Dorsalis pedis artery

Arcuate artery

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.13


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Superior and inferior vena cava enter the right


atrium of the heart
• Superior vena cava drains the head and
arms
• Inferior vena cava drains the lower body

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the superior vena cava


• Radial and ulnar veins  brachial vein 
axillary vein
• These veins drain the arms
• Cephalic vein drains the lateral aspect of the
arm and empties into the axillary vein
• Basilic vein drains the medial aspect of the arm
and empties into the brachial vein
• Basilic and cephalic veins are jointed at the
median cubital vein (elbow area)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the superior vena cava


• Subclavian vein receives
• Venous blood from the arm via the axillary
vein
• Venous blood from skin and muscles via
external jugular vein
• Vertebral vein drains the posterior part of the
head
• Internal jugular vein drains the dural sinuses of
the brain

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the superior vena cava


• Left and right brachiocephalic veins receive
venous blood from the
• Subclavian veins
• Vertebral veins
• Internal jugular veins
• Brachiocephalic veins join to form the
superior vena cava  right atrium of heart
• Azygous vein drains the thorax

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the inferior vena cava


• Anterior and posterior tibial veins and fibial
veins drain the legs
• Posterior tibial vein  popliteal vein  femoral
vein  external iliac vein
• Great saphenous veins (longest veins of the
body) receive superficial drainage of the legs
• Each common iliac vein (left and right) is
formed by the union of the internal and external
iliac vein on its own side

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the inferior vena cava


• Right gonadal vein drains the right ovary in
females and right testicle in males
• Left gonadal vein empties into the left renal
vein
• Left and right renal veins drain the kidneys
• Hepatic portal vein drains the digestive
organs and travels through the liver before it
enters systemic circulation

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Major Veins of Systemic Circulation

• Veins draining into the inferior vena cava


• Left and right hepatic veins drain the liver

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Veins of the head and trunk
Dural venous sinuses

External jugular vein


Vertebral vein
Internal jugular vein Veins that drain the upper limb
Right and left Subclavian vein
brachiocephalic veins Axillary vein
Superior vena cava Cephalic vein
Brachial vein
Great cardiac vein Basilic vein

Hepatic veins
Splenic vein
Hepatic portal vein
Renal vein Median cubital vein
Superior Ulnar vein
mesenteric vein Radial vein
Inferior
mesenteric vein
Digital veins

Veins that drain the lower limb


External iliac vein
Inferior vena cava Femoral vein
Common iliac vein Great saphenous vein
Popliteal vein
Internal iliac vein
Posterior tibial vein
Anterior tibial vein
Small saphenous vein

Dorsal venous arch


Dorsal metatarsal veins

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.14


Arterial Supply of the Brain

• Internal carotid arteries divide into


• Anterior and middle cerebral arteries
• These arteries supply most of the cerebrum
• Vertebral arteries join once within the skull to
form the basilar artery
• Basilar artery serves the brain stem and
cerebellum

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Arterial Supply of the Brain

• Posterior cerebral arteries form from the


division of the basilar artery
• These arteries supply the posterior
cerebrum

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Circle of Willis

• Anterior and posterior blood supplies are


united by small communicating arterial
branches
• Result—complete circle of connecting blood
vessels called cerebral arterial circle or circle
of Willis

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Anterior Cerebral arterial
circle
Frontal lobe (circle of Willis)
Optic chiasma • Anterior
communicating
Middle
artery
cerebral
artery • Anterior
cerebral artery
Internal • Posterior
carotid communicating
artery artery
Mammillary • Posterior
body cerebral artery
Temporal Basilar artery
lobe
Vertebral artery
Pons
Occipital lobe
Cerebellum

(a) Posterior
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.15a
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.15b
Fetal Circulation

• Fetus receives exchanges of gases, nutrients,


and wastes through the placenta
• Umbilical cord contains three vessels
• Umbilical vein—carries blood rich in
nutrients and oxygen to the fetus
• Umbilical arteries (2)—carry carbon dioxide
and debris-laden blood from fetus to
placenta

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superior vena cava Ductus arteriosus
Pulmonary artery
Pulmonary veins
Foramen ovale

Inferior vena cava


Hepatic vein
Ductus venosus
Inferior vena cava
Hepatic portal vein

Umbilical vein
Fetal umbilicus
Aorta
Common iliac artery
Umbilical cord
External iliac artery
Internal iliac artery
Umbilical arteries
Urinary bladder

KEY:
High oxygenation
Moderate oxygenation
Low oxygenation
Very low oxygenation Placenta

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.16


Fetal Circulation

• Blood flow bypasses the liver through the


ductus venosus and enters the inferior vena
cava  right atrium of heart
• Blood flow bypasses the lungs
• Blood entering right atrium is shunted directly
into the left atrium through the foramen ovale
• Ductus arteriosus connects the aorta and
pulmonary trunk (becomes ligamentum
arteriosum at birth)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Brachiocephalic trunk Left common carotid artery
Superior vena cava Left subclavian artery

Right pulmonary artery Aortic arch


Ligamentum arteriosum
Ascending aorta
Left pulmonary artery
Pulmonary trunk Left pulmonary veins

Right pulmonary Left atrium


veins
Auricle of left atrium
Right atrium
Circumflex artery
Right coronary artery
in coronary sulcus (right Left coronary artery in
atrioventricular groove) coronary sulcus (left
atrioventricular groove)
Anterior cardiac vein
Left ventricle
Right ventricle
Great cardiac vein
Marginal artery
Anterior interventricular
Small cardiac vein artery (in anterior
interventricular sulcus)
Inferior vena cava
Apex
(a)

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3a


Superior vena cava Aorta

Left pulmonary artery


Right pulmonary artery
Left atrium

Right atrium Left pulmonary veins


Right pulmonary
veins Pulmonary semilunar valve
Left atrioventricular valve
Fossa ovalis
(bicuspid valve)
Aortic semilunar valve
Right atrioventricular
valve (tricuspid valve)
Left ventricle
Right ventricle

Chordae tendineae Interventricular septum


Inferior vena cava
Myocardium

Visceral pericardium

(b) Frontal section showing interior chambers and valves.

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.3b


Hepatic Portal Circulation

• Veins of hepatic portal circulation drain


• Digestive organs
• Spleen
• Pancreas
• Hepatic portal vein carries this blood to the
liver
• Liver helps maintain proper glucose, fat, and
protein concentrations in blood

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Hepatic Portal Circulation

• Major vessels of hepatic portal circulation


• Inferior and superior mesenteric veins
• Splenic vein
• Left gastric vein

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Arterial Venous
blood blood
Inferior
vena cava
Stomach and intestine Liver
Nutrients and Liver cells (hepatocytes)
toxins absorbed
Nutrients
and toxins
leave

Hepatic
portal vein

First capillary bed Second capillary bed


(liver sinusoids) Hepatic
vein

Hepatic portal system

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.17


Inferior vena cava
(not part of hepatic
portal system)

Gastric veins
Liver
Spleen
Stomach
Hepatic portal vein
Splenic vein

Inferior
mesenteric vein

Superior
mesenteric vein

Small intestine
Large intestine

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.18


Pulse

• Pulse
• Pressure wave of blood
• Monitored at “pressure points” in arteries
where pulse is easily palpated
• Pulse averages 70 to 76 beats per minute
at rest

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Superficial temporal artery

Facial artery

Common carotid artery

Brachial artery

Radial artery

Femoral artery

Popliteal artery

Posterior tibial
artery

Dorsalis pedis
artery
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.19
Blood Pressure

• Measurements by health professionals are


made on the pressure in large arteries
• Systolic—pressure at the peak of ventricular
contraction
• Diastolic—pressure when ventricles relax
• Write systolic pressure first and diastolic last
(120/80 mm Hg)
• Pressure in blood vessels decreases as
distance from the heart increases

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


120
Systolic pressure

100

Pressure (mm Hg)


80

Diastolic
60 pressure

40

20

0
−10

Venules

Venae cavae
Arterioles

Capillaries
Aorta

Arteries

Veins
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.20
Blood pressure
120 systolic
70 diastolic
(to be measured)

Brachial
artery

(a) The course of the


brachial artery of
the arm. Assume a
blood pressure of
120/70 in a young,
healthy person.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.21a
Pressure
in cuff
above 120;
no sounds
audible

120 mm Hg
Rubber cuff
inflated with
air

Brachial
artery
closed

(b) The blood pressure


cuff is wrapped
snugly around the
arm just above the
elbow and inflated
until the cuff
pressure exceeds the
systolic blood
pressure. At this
point, blood flow into
the arm is stopped,
and a brachial pulse
cannot be felt or
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. heard. Figure 11.21b
Pressure
in cuff
below 120,
but above 70

120 mm Hg
70 mm Hg

Sounds
audible in
stethoscope

(c) The pressure in the cuff


is gradually reduced
while the examiner
listens (auscultates) for
sounds in the brachial
artery with a
stethoscope. The
pressure read as the
first soft tapping
sounds are heard (the
first point at which a
small amount of blood
is spurting through the
constricted artery) is
recorded as the systolic
pressure.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.21c
Pressure
in cuff
below 70;
no sounds
audible

70 mm Hg

(d) As the pressure is


reduced still further,
the sounds become
louder and more
distinct; when the
artery is no longer
constricted and blood
flows freely, the
sounds can no longer
be heard. The
pressure at which the
sounds disappear is
recorded as the
diastolic pressure.
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.20d
Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors
• BP is blood pressure
• BP is affected by age, weight, time of day,
exercise, body position, emotional state
• CO is the amount of blood pumped out of the left
ventricle per minute
• PR is peripheral resistance, or the amount of friction
blood encounters as it flows through vessels
• Narrowing of blood vessels and increased blood
volume increases PR
• BP = CO  PR

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors

• Neural factors
• Autonomic nervous system adjustments
(sympathetic division)
• Renal factors
• Regulation by altering blood volume
• Renin—hormonal control

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Blood Pressure: Effects of Factors

• Temperature
• Heat has a vasodilating effect
• Cold has a vasoconstricting effect
• Chemicals
• Various substances can cause increases or
decreases
• Diet

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.22
Variations in Blood Pressure
• Normal human range is variable
• Normal
• 140 to 110 mm Hg systolic
• 80 to 75 mm Hg diastolic
• Hypotension
• Low systolic (below 110 mm Hg)
• Often associated with illness
• Hypertension
• High systolic (above 140 mm Hg)
• Can be dangerous if it is chronic

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Capillary Exchange

• Substances exchanged due to concentration


gradients
• Oxygen and nutrients leave the blood
• Carbon dioxide and other wastes leave the
cells

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Capillary Exchange: Mechanisms

• Direct diffusion across plasma membranes


• Endocytosis or exocytosis
• Some capillaries have gaps (intercellular
clefts)
• Plasma membrane not joined by tight
junctions
• Fenestrations (pores) of some capillaries

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Lumen of
capillary
Vesicles

Endothelial
Intercellular
fenestration
cleft (pore)

4 Transport
via vesicles

3 Diffusion
through pore

2 Diffusion through
1 Direct intracellular cleft
diffusion
through
membrane Interstitial fluid
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.23
Fluid Movements at Capillary Beds

• Blood pressure forces fluid and solutes out of


capillaries
• Osmotic pressure draws fluid into capillaries
• Blood pressure is higher than osmotic
pressure at the arterial end of the capillary bed
• Blood pressure is lower than osmotic pressure
at the venous end of the capillary bed

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Tissue cell Interstitial fluid

Net fluid Net fluid


movement movement
Bl out in
oo
df l ow
l ow
o df
o
Bl

Arterial Venule
end of end of
capillary capillary

At the arterial end of At the venule end of


a capillary, blood the capillary, blood
pressure is more than pressure is less than
osmotic pressure, osmotic pressure,
and fluid flows out of and fluid flows from
the capillary and into the interstitial fluid
the interstitial fluid. into the capillary.

Blood pressure is
higher than osmotic
pressure

Osmotic pressure
(remains steady
in capillary bed) Blood pressure is
lower than osmotic
pressure
© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 11.24
Developmental Aspects of
the Cardiovascular System
• A simple “tube heart” develops in the embryo
and pumps by the fourth week
• The heart becomes a four-chambered organ
by the end of seven weeks
• Few structural changes occur after the
seventh week

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.


Developmental Aspects of
the Cardiovascular System
• Aging problems associated with the
cardiovascular system include
• Venous valves weaken
• Varicose veins
• Progressive atherosclerosis
• Loss of elasticity of vessels leads to
hypertension
• Coronary artery disease results from vessels
filled with fatty, calcified deposits

© 2012 Pearson Education, Inc.

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