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Portage LearningBIOD 152AP2 Lab4 VERIFIED

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Portage LearningBIOD 152AP2 Lab4 VERIFIED Portage LearningBIOD 152AP2 Lab4 VERIFIED Portage LearningBIOD 152AP2 Lab4 VERIFIED

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  • January 26, 2022
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Portage Learning BIOD 152AP2 Lab4




Portage Learning
BIOD 152AP2 Lab4


A&P 2 Lab 4
Circulatory System-Blood Flow Tracings
Circulatory system- how the blood from the heart is circulated throughout the body.
General blood flow through the body after it leaves the heart follows a mapping system. From
the heart, it flows through arteries, then capillaries, and comes back to the heart by way of
veins.
BLOOD VESSELS IN THE CIRCULATORY SYSTEM:
• Arteries- referred to as efferent blood vessel in the circulatory system
o They always carry blood away from the heart.
o Typically carry oxygenated blood. (except in the pulmonary artery)
o 1. Conducting arteries:
▪ very large arteries and typically exit from the heart
▪ They have the need/ability to expand when the heart beats so they
withstand the splurge. So, with every heartbeat, blood surges out of the
heart into these large vessels.
• To do this, they must have a layer of elastic tissue that gives it the
ability to stretch and recoil when the heart is relaxing.
▪ EX: aorta and pulmonary trunk
o Atherosclerosis- when arteries age and stiffen because plaque builds up in the
arteries, they loose that elasticity and the ability to stretch when blood surges
into them.
▪ It results in an increase in pressure in those vessels which can lead to an
aneurism- a weak point in a artery and with each heartbeat, that little
thin walled area will pulsate and it can further and further weaken and
eventually rupture which can lead to death or stroke.
o 2. Distributing arteries:
▪ A.k.a. medium or muscular arteries
▪ They are direct branches from the conducting arteries
▪ Have a very thick muscular wall (up to 40 layers of smooth muscle)
▪ The muscular wall in a distributing artery makes up 75% of the arterial
wall itself.
• EX: brachial artery, femoral artery (named for area where they are
distributing their blood)
o 3. Resistance arteries:

,Portage Learning BIOD 152AP2 Lab4



▪ A.k.a. small arteries
▪ Too numerous to name
o 4. Metarterioles:
▪ Very short vessels that will link the arteriole system to the capillaries.
• AFTER BLOOD FLOWS THROUGH THE ARTERIAL SYSTEM, IT THEN FLOWS INTO A SERIES
OF CAPILLARY BEDS.

,Portage Learning BIOD 152AP2 Lab4



o 5. Capillaries:
▪ Known as the exchange vessels because they have very thin walls that
exchange oxygen, glucose, and other nutrients in the body.
▪ They connect the smallest arteries to the smallest veins.
• Veins- afferent blood vessels because they bring blood back to the heart
o They typically carry deoxygenated blood (except the pulmonary vein)
o They are called Capacitance Vessels because they typically control a large amount
of volume.
o Can stretch more easily than arteries and have thin, flaccid walls and can
therefore accommodate a larger volume of blood.
o Comparing arteries to veins:
▪ In a resting person, about 11% of the blood is found in the arteries while
54% is found in the veins.
▪ Veins are subject to much lower blood pressure because they are further
away from the heart. Because of that, they can have thinner walls
compared to the arteries that need more muscular support.
▪ In the arteriole system, we go from large to small vessels and the venous
system is opposite.
o 6. Post capillary vein:
▪ Very small veins called venules.
o 7. Muscular Venules:
▪ Very small and too numerous to name
o 8. Medium veins:
▪ They drain blood from specific areas of the body, organs and muscles.
▪ EX: radial and ulnar veins (drain blood out of the forearm)
▪ Unique: they contain valves- flaps of tissue that extend into the lumen
and point upwards towards the heart.
• Because veins have a very low blood pressure, they don’t have the
strength to pump the blood back to the heart against the pull of
gravity.
• Skeletal muscles that surround the veins also help to pump the
blood
o EX: when calve muscles contract, they squeeze around the
vein and push blood up through the valve.
o Kind of like a “milking action” known as the skeletal muscle
pump.
• When the valves weaken and can’t perform their job, varicose
veins will result. They are visible through the skin due to the blood
pooling and backflowing into the venous system.
o 9. Venous Sinuses:
▪ Large vessels with very thin walls and very large lumens

, Portage Learning BIOD 152AP2 Lab4




▪EX: coronary sinus of the heart where blood that flows through the heart,
will dump into the coronary sinus before entering back into the vena
cava.
▪ EX: Dural sinuses in the brain. They collect the blood flow from the brain
before they return to the heart.
o 10. Large veins
▪ EX: Superior/Inferior Vena Cava- will bring blood back to the heart and
finally start the system all over again.


REVIEW OF BLOOD FLOW THROUGH THE HEART
• Inferior Vena Cava: drains from anywhere below the diaphragm
• Superior Vena Cava: drains from anywhere above the diaphragm
• They both bring blood into the right atrium of the heart
• Tricuspid valve
• Right ventricle
• Pulmonary semilunar valve----pulmonary trunk-----left and right pulmonary arteries-----
flow to the lungs
• Blood picks up oxygen in the lungs and then to the
• Pulmonary veins
• Left atrium
• Bicuspid valve
• Left ventricle
• Aortic semilunar valve
• Ascending aorta:
• Off of the ascending aorta, the branches for the Left and right coronary arteries branch
off into the heart to supply the heart muscle with blood.
• Once the heart uses the oxygen in the blood, it will flow into the venous system into the
coronary sinus which will dump into the right atrium to start the process again
BLOOD TRACINGS THROUGH THE BODY
• How blood gets to specific organs and regions.
• Aorta is the starting point.




• ASCENDING AORTA

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