Mass Transport In Mammals Flashcards

1
Q

Mass transport in animals

A

Mass flow, the bulk movement of substances through transport systems
Transport systems linked with specialist exchange system, maintain con grad

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2
Q

Transport systems in mammals

A

Larger organisms cannot exchange materials sufficiently across surface
Need exchange surfaces, eg alveoli in lungs
Required to take material between cells, exchange surface

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3
Q

What do transport systems in mammals rely on?

A

SA:V

How active the organism is

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4
Q

Features of a transport system

A

Medium to carry medium across
Medium needs to be moved in bulk over large distance
Closed system of tubular vessel containing medium
Mechanism for moving transport medium, eg, muscular contractions of heart

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5
Q

Circulatory system in mammals

A

Double circulatory system
Important to maintain high body temp and high rate of metabolism
Material exchange takes place by diffusion, over large SA, short distances, steep diffusion gradient

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6
Q

Vessels in systemic circulation

A

Hepatic artery and vein
Hepatic portal vein (from stomach)
Renal artery and vein

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7
Q

Vessels in pulmonary circulation

A

Superior vena cava
Pulmonary artery
Pulmonary vein
Aorta

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8
Q

Blood vessels

A
Arteries
Arteriolar
Capillaries
Venues
Veins
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9
Q

Structure of blood vessels

A
Tough outer layer
Muscle layer
Elastic layer
Endothelium (caps only have E and L)
Lumen
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10
Q

Function of veins, ventures

A
Blood to heart from body
Thin collagen walls
Low pressure
Large lumen, reduce flow resistance
Valves to prevent backflow
Low pressure blood
Deoxygenated blood except pulmonary vein
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11
Q

Function of capillaries

A

Allow diffusion of materials between blood and tissues
Very thin permeable walls, 1 cell thick, material exchange
V small lumen, short diffusion pathway for material exchange
No valves
BP falls in capillaries
Changes from oxygenated to deoxygenated

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12
Q

Function of arteries, arterioles

A
Carry blood from heart to body
Thick walls, smooth elastic layers, restrict high pressure
Muscle layer aids pumping
Small lumen
No valves except in pul artery, aorta
High BP
Oxygenated except in pul art
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13
Q

Arterial movement

A
Expand during systole
Recoil during diastole
Arterioles, more muscular, vasoconstriction, close off cap beds
Vasodilation, opens up cap beds
Changes occur under control of medulla
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14
Q

Venous movement

A

Leg contractions help blood move up against gravity

DVT caused by lack of movement

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15
Q

Tissue/ Interstitial fluid

A

Contains glucose, amino acids, fatty acids, salts, oxygen. No AA
Similar to plasma
Supplies substances to tissues
Recieves waste, CO2
Tissue fluid moves into and around cells, diffusion

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16
Q

Hydrostatic pressure

A

Hydrostatic pressure of tissue fluid out caps, prevents outward fluid movement

17
Q

Water potential in cap beds

A

Lower WP of blood due to plasma proteins

Pulls water back into blood within capillaries

18
Q

Blood composition

A

55% plasma
1% WBC
44% RBC
Hematocrit can change

19
Q

Tissue fluid formation

A

High hydrostatic pressure in arterioles end of cap, blood plasma squeezed out cap
Cell proteins too big
Tissue fluid formed, material exchanged from fluid to cel by 4 methods of transport
Low hydrostatic pressure at venous end, lost too much plasma, plasma back into caps
Water enters caps by osmosis
NOt all plasma returns, drains into lymph vessels in cap beds
Waste diffuses into caps
Lymph, similar to tissue fluid, move digestive product fats
Narrowing of vessels pushes fluid out of vessels, ultrafiltration

20
Q

Lymphatic system

A

Made up of system of lymph vessels along veins
Lead to heart, lymph drains back into blood system at superior vena cava
Helped by muscle contractions like in veins
Vessels also absorb fats from small intestines from lacteals
Networks in various places, lymph nodes
Swollen if more WBC needed to fight infection