cardiovascular
how much blood can be in an animal?
8-10 percent of body weight
Records the electrical signals from the heart and captures them on a computer monitor or a printer
Electrocardiograph
explain the transport of blood in the body
Heart, artery, capillary bed, veins, and heart
medium and large veins have
One way valves, pocket valves
what does the pulmonary vein supply the heart with?
Oxigenated blood from the lungs.
what type of pressure is found in veins
Relatively zero pressure
systolic blood pressure is measured when
The ventricles fill with blood
what is the function of a valve in a vein
To prevent reverse bloodflow
Why do arteries have thick walls?
To withstand the high pressure
which blood vessel provides oxygenated blood?
aorta
valve between the aorta and left ventricle. keeps blood from regurgitating back into left ventricle
aortic valve
at the point of the heart, is free, not attached by ligaments or blood vessels, points caudally and ventrally
apex
smaller than arteries
arterioles
which type of vessel needs to withstand high blood pressure?
artery
function of one way valves or pocket valves
assist in movement of blood back to the heart
what is it called when plaque buildup in the arteries
atherosclerosis
relaxation of the atria, during which the atria fill with blood from the large veins
atrial diastole
both atria contract and force the blood from the atria into the ventricles
atrial systole
located in the bottom of the right atrium, the only route of conduction of the electrical impulse from the atria to the ventricle
atrio-ventricular node
site for entry and exit of major blood vessels, situated cranially and dorsally
base
the endothelial lining found in the tunica interna is connected to what?
basement membrane with glycoproteins and collagen fibers
What shape are red blood cells?
biconcave discs
Which one is not transported in plasma? Electrolytes, urea, bile.
bile
what is a thrombus?
blood clot
smaller than arterioles, just wide enough for red blood cells (rbc) to move through
capillaries
which blood vessels gives nutrients and oxygen to tissues
capillaries
what is a network of capillaries called?
capillary bed
towards the tail or away from the head-end of the body
caudal
drains blood from the body
caudal vena cava
why do cardiologists run ekg/ecgs?
check for heart conditions/check if heart is healthy
which vessels supply the heart with blood?
coronary arteries
drains blood from the head
cranial vena cava
causes the heart muscle to contract
depolarization
tissue that the tunica media contains
elastin and smooth muscle
What kind of signal does the cardiac pacemaker use?
electrical
what are capillaries the site of?
exchange between blood and tissues
what forms valves?
folded tunica interna
what does the pulse represent?
heartbeat
what structure is also found in the tunica interna
internal elastic lamina
receives blood from the left atrium. sends blood to the body via the aorta
left ventricle
what is plasma?
liquid portion of blood
tissue found in the tunica externa
loose fibrous connective tissue
where does the right ventricle pump blood to?
lungs
filter lymph and make antibodies
lymph nodes
In what units is blood pressure measured?
mm Hg (mercury)
An abnormal heart sound
murmur
electrical pulses in the heart are controlled by groups of cells called
nodes
How thick is the wall of a capillary?
one cell thick
which component of blood is crucial to clotting?
platelets
what is the function of the blood brain barrier?
protect the brain from toxins
only artery with oxygen poor blood
pulmonary artery
what artery is responsible for carrying deoxygenated blood?
pulmonary artery
to transport blood from the right ventricle of the heart to the lungs
pulmonary circulation
valve between the right ventricle and pulmonary artery that keeps blood from regurgitating back into the right ventricle
pulmonary valve
only vein with oxygen rich blood
pulmonary vein
at the apex of the heart-originate at the branches
purkinje fibers
which type of cell carries oxygen around the body?
red blood cells
What chamber does the vena cava empty into?
right atrium
what tissue composes tunica interna
simple squamous epithelium (endothelium)
natural pacemaker
sinoatrial node
on side of abdomen, close to stomach. makes WBCs and stores RBCs, filters blood, removes old/damaged RBCs from circulation
spleen
thickening of blood vessel
stenosis
a blood clot in the brain can cause a
stroke
process to pump blood to rest of body
systemic circulation
when the heart is contracting
systole
veins are going to have dramatically ______ walls
thinner
function of elastic lamina
to allow expansion for blood flow
what is the function of white blood cells?
to be part of the immune system
purpose of the basement membrane with glycoproteins and collagen fibers
to glue the epithelium to underlying tissue
right A-V Valve. keeps blood going in right direction and not regurgitating back into atria
tricuspid valve
outermost layer of a blood vessel
tunica externa
what is the innermost layer of the blood vessel?
tunica interna
middle layer of blood vessel
tunica media
walls of all blood vessels except capillaries have three layers referred to as?
tunics
blood vessels with own blood supply
vasa vasorum
Which blood vessels have valves?
veins
rest. ventricles relax, whole process starts over again
ventricle diastole
both ventricles contract, blood is forced to the lungs via the pulmonary trunk, and the rest of the body via the aorta.
ventricular systole
where do veins and arteries differ structurally?
wall thickness
why do arteries have thick walls of smooth muscle?
withstand high pressure