Circulatory Unit
Oxygen
O2. This gas is circulated to muscles and organs for proper functioning. Oxygenated blood.
Vessels
Vein Arteries
Aorta
Artery, transports oxygenated blood away from heart to systemic circuit. Largest artery in the body.
Pharynx
Last area before air and food are separated to different locations. Passageway for air and food to cross.
Ventricles
Lower chambers of the heart. Act as pumps. Pumps blood.
Atrioventricular
Prevents backflow of blood between atria and ventricles. Located in the lower wall of the right atrium and sends an impulse through the bundle of His, which passes down between both ventricles and into the ventricles through Purkinje fibers. This results in the contraction of the ventricles
Arteriole
Smaller diameter vessel branching off an artery. Blood vessels that are smaller branches off of arteries. CARRIES BLOOD TO THE SMALLEST OF ALL BLOOD VESSELS
Nose
Smell, filter and warm air and moistures.
Atria
TWO UPPER CHAMBERS OF THE HEART. Act as recievers. Receive blood.
Alveoli
Thin spheres where gas exchange takes place. Where capillaries exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide. Tiny sacs of lung tissue specialized for the movement of gases between air and blood
Left Pulmonary Vein
Transports oxygenated blood into the heart from the left lung. Bring oxygen-rich blood from the left lung to the left atrium
Bronchus
Two branches, one that goes to each lung; widest branch off the trachea.
Right Bronchus
Largest branch off of the trachea to the lungs. Is larger and shorter and takes a more vertical direction
Pulmonary
Lungs. Blood flow through a network of vessels between the heart and the lungs for the oxygenation of blood and the removal of carbon dioxide.
Right Ventricle
Pumps deoxygenated blood to lungs, receives blood from right atrium. O2 poor blood leaves the heart going to the lungs from this heart chamber.
Diaphragm
Pushes lungs up and down (makes them explode). Large, flat muscle at the bottom of the chest cavity that helps with breathing. (Anatomy) a muscular partition separating the abdominal and thoracic cavities.
Right Atrium
Receives deoxygenated blood from sup/inf vena cava, pumps into right ventricle. RA. Receives deoxygenated blood from the body
Left Atrium
Receives oxygenated blood from lungs, pumps blood into left ventricle. LA.
Capillary
Thin vessels where gas exchange takes place. A tiny blood vessel where substances are exchanged between the blood and the body cells. Very small vessels where gas exchange takes place.
Right pulmonary Artery
Transports deoxygenated blood away from heart to right lung. RPA. Takes oxygen poor blood from the right ventricle to the right lung.
Left Pulmonary Artery
Transports deoxygenated blood away from the heart to left lung. Carries poor oxygenated blood from the right ventricle to the left lung.
Right Pulmonary Vein
Transports oxygenated blood into heart from right lung. Bring oxygen-rich blood from the right lung to the left atrium.
Inferior Vena Cava
Vein, transports deoxygenated blood into right atrium from systemic circuit below the heart. IVC. A vein that is the largest vein in the human body and returns blood to the right atrium of the heart from bodily parts below the diaphragm.
Superior Vena Cava
Vein, transports deoxygenated blood into the right atrium from systemic circuit above the heart. A vein that is the second largest vein in the human body and returns deoxygenated blood to the right atrium of the heart from the upper half of the body.
Larynx
Voice box.
Pulmonary Circuit
A circuit carries blood between the heart and lungs. Blood flow through a network of vessels between the heart and the lungs for the oxygenation of blood and the removal of carbon dioxide.
Systemic Circuit
A circuit that carries blood between the heart and the rest of the body. Circuit of blood that carries blood between the heart and the rest of the body.
Valve
A flap of tissue in the heart or a vein that prevents blood from flowing backward.
Atrium
A heart chamber that receives blood
Oxygenated Blood
Blood is found on the left side of the heart. Blood that carries an abundant amount of oxygen. Blood high in oxygen and low in carbon dioxide
Deoxygenated Blood
Blood is found on the right side of the heart. Blood that is oxygen poor. Blood high in carbon dioxide and low in oxygen
Arteries
Blood vessels that carry blood away from the heart
Veins
Blood vessels that carry blood back to the heart
Carbon Dioxide
CO2. This gas is a waste product expelled by animals. Deoxygenated blood.
Mouth
Filter air, take in food.
Left Ventricle
LV. Pumps oxygenated blood into the aorta.
Vena Cava
Large veins which return deoxygenated blood to the heart. Largest Vein. One of two large vessels (superior and inferior) that return deoxygenated blood to the right atrium of the heart.
Epiglottis
Muscular flap that regulates air. A flab of tissue that prevents food from entering the trachea, or windpipe, during swallowing
Bronchiole
Narrower branches found within the lung. The smallest beaches off of the trachea in the lungs. Airways in the lungs that lead from the bronchi to the alveoli.
Lungs
Organ between the pulmonary artery and the pulmonary vein.
Right Lung
Organ where gas exchange takes place. Larger and shorter (displaced by liver) and has three lobes.
Diffusion
Oxygen moving from high concentration in the blood to low concentration in the muscles.
Trachea
Pipe found in neck taking air to the lungs. Windpipe contains cilia to help filter air.
Left AV Valve
Regulates direction of flow of blood from left atrium to left ventricle. Also called Bicuspid or Mitral valve This valve controls flow down to a specific Ventricle
Right AV Valve
Regulates direction of flow of blood from right atrium to right ventricle. Also called the Tricupsid valve. Prevents back flow of deoxygenated blood
Aortic Valve
Regulates the flow of blood from left ventricle into aorta. Between left ventricle and aorta
Left Bronchus
The smallest branch off of the trachea in the lungs. Carries air to lung