07 Human Transport Biology Notes IGCSE 2014 PDF
07 Human Transport Biology Notes IGCSE 2014 PDF
07 Human Transport Biology Notes IGCSE 2014 PDF
one circuit links the heart and lungs (low pressure circulation)
the other circuit links the heart with the rest of the body (high
pressure circulation).
The function of the heart is to pump blood around the body. The right side
pumps blood to the lungs and the left side pumps blood to the rest of
the body.
Heart's function
Blood circulation
Muscular contraction
The heart is made of a special type of muscle called cardiac muscle which
contracts and relaxes regularly, throughout life.
The hearts muscle is constantly active, so it needs its own blood supply,
through the coronary artery, to provide it with oxygen and glucose.
Valves in the heart prevent blood from being pushed backwards up into the
atria when the heart beats.
Animation: Heart Contraction and Blood Flow
How the heart pumps blood
Try this
i)
ii)
iii)
2.Blood leaving the right ventricle has more CO2 and less O2 than blood
entering the left atrium.
Common misconceptions
Remember that blood passing through the chambers of the heart
does not supply the heart muscle with oxygen or glucose. The heart muscles
has its own blood supply - via the coronary arteries - to do this.
Coronary arteries
The muscles of the heart are so thick that the nutrients and oxygen in the
blood inside the heart would not be able to diffuse to all the muscles quickly
enough. The heart muscles needs a constant supply of nutrients so that it
can keep contracting and relaxing. The coronary arteries supply this.
If a coronary artery gets blocked e.g. by a blood clot the cardiac
muscles run short of oxygen they can not respire can not obtain
energy to contract heart stops beating. This is called a heart
attack or cardiac arrest.
Main causes of a coronary heart disease and preventive measures
There are 3 main kinds of blood vessels arteries, veins and capillaries.
Arteries carry blood away from the heart. They divide again and
again, and eventually form very tiny vessels called capillaries.
The capillaries gradually join up with one another to form large
vessels called veins.
Veins carry blood towards the heart.
The comparison of blood vessels structure and functions
Sample questions
[2 marks]
[1 mark]
[3
Student's answer
i) A, vena cava ()
ii) C ()
B, pulmonary vein ()
Examiner's comments
Blood vessels B is the pulmonary artery. Arteries of the heart always carry
blood from a ventricle.
Part ii) needs two answers (blood vessels C and D) to gain the mark.
D is the pulmonary vein, which carries oxygenated blood to the heart from
the lung.
C is the aorta, which carries oxygenated blood from the heart to the body.
In part iii) the name of the valve is correct, but there are two marks for its
functions. This candidate has given only one statement: a second mark was
available for stating that the valve prevents blood from going back into the
left ventricle.
Credit: moodle
Plasma transports:
blood cells
soluble nutrients e.g. glucose (products of digestion) from the small
intestine to the organs
amino acids (plasma acts as a pool for amino acids for these cannot
be stored in the body)
plasma proteins that are important in blood clotting (e.g.
fibrinogen).
CO2 (waste gas produced by respiration in cells) from the organs to
lungs
Other wastes of digestion (e.g. urea) from the liver to the kidneys.
Antibodies and antitoxins
Hormones
Ions
Heat from the liver and muscles to all parts of the body.
Have a special biconcave disc shape increases the surface area and
makes the diffusion of oxygen into & out of the cell easier.
Old red blood cells are broken down in the liver, spleen and bone
marrow. Some of the iron from the Hb is stored, and used for making
new Hb, some of it is turned into bile pigment and excreted.
Can move around and squeeze out through the walls of blood
capillaries into all parts of the body.
There are many different kinds of white blood cells. They all have the
function of fighting pathogens (disease-causing bacteria and
viruses) and to clear up any dead body cells in your body:
a.Phagocytes:
Remove any microorganisms that invade the body and might cause
infection, engulf (ingest) and kill them by digesting them.
3. Platelets (thrombocytes)
Involve in blood clotting: form blood clot, which stop blood loss at
a wound and prevent the entry of germs into the body.
Prevent excessive blood loss from the body when there is a damage of
the blood vessel.
Maintain the blood pressure.
Prevent the entry of microorganism and foreign particles into the body.
Promote wound healing.
Antibody production
Antibodies are produced by lymphocytes, which are formed in lymph
nodes. Lymphocytes produced antibodies in response to the presence
of pathogens such as bacteria. This is because alien cells have chemicals
called antigen on their surface. A different antibody is produced for each
antigen.
The antibodies make bacteria clump together in preparation for action
by phagocytes, or neutralise toxins produced by the bacteria. Once
antibodies have been made, they remain in the blood to provide long-term
protection.
Some lymphocytes memorise the antigens the body has been exposed to.
They can rapidly reproduce and produce antibodies to respond to further
infections by the same pathogen (disease-causing organism).
Tissue rejection
Transplants involve replacing a
damaged organ with a donor
organ. Unfortunately, lymphocytes
and phagocytes will respond to any
foreign cells in your body, even if
they are not pathogens.
If a person's kidneys fail, they can
be given a new kidney taken from
another person. However the
recipient's immune system will
recognise the cells in the new
kidney as 'foreign', and will attack
and destroy them.
The transplanted organ triggers an
immune response, antibodies
are secreted and the organ may
be rejected. This is called tissue
rejection.
Phagocytosis
Phagocytes have the ability to move out of capillaries to the site of an
infection. They then engulf (ingest) the infecting pathogens and kill them by
digesting them.
The lymphatic vessel takes the lymph to the blood stream by secreting them
in a vein near the heart, called subclavian vein. The lymph in the
lymphatic vessels are moved along by the squeeze of muscles against the
vessel, just like some veins.
The return of tissue fluid to the blood in the form of lymph fluid prevents
fluid built up in the tissue.
2. Production of lymphocytes
The lymphatic system is an important component of the immune system,
which fights infection. One group of white blood cells, the lymphocytes, are
made in lymph glands such as the tonsils, adenoids and spleen. The
glands become more active during an infection because they are producing
and releasing large numbers of lymphocytes.
The lymphocytes can live and multiply in the lymphatic system, where they
attack and destroy foreign organisms. Lymphoid tissue scattered
throughout the body filters out pathogens, other foreign matter and cellular
debris in body fluids.
The ventricles have thicker walls than the atria, and the left ventricle
has a thicker wall than the right ventricle, to allow them to produce a
greater force when the muscles contract, necessary so that they can
push the blood further.
Arteries are thick-walled, elastic vessels that carry pulsing, highpressure blood away from the heart. They split into capillaries, which
are tiny vessels with walls only one cell thick. Capillaries take blood
close to every cell to the body, so that the cells are supplied with
oxygen and nutrients and have their waste products removed.
Capillaries join up to form veins. Veins are thin-walled vessels with
valves, which carry low-pressure blood back to the heart.
Blood contains red cells, white cells and platelets floating in plasma.
Plasma transports many different substances in solution. Red cells
contain the iron-containing protein haemoglobin, which transports
oxygen. White cells fight against bacteria and viruses. Platelets help
the blood to clot.
Fluid leaks out of capillaries to fill the spaces between all the body
cells, where it is called tissue fluid. It is collected into lymph vessels
which carry it back to the bloodstream.