Biology Revision Notes Part3
Biology Revision Notes Part3
Biology Revision Notes Part3
Larynx (voicebox)
Thachea
Ribs
Bronchiole
Alveolus Bronchus
Intercostal Muscle
Thoracic Cavity
contained within
pleural membranes
Diaphragm
How breathing works
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
Smoking:
Chemical Effect
Tar Blocks up alveoli, making gas exchange more difficult.
Also clogs up cilia (little hairs lining the lungs, whose
job is to “wave” and remove mucus and trapped
bacteria out of the lungs).
Nicotine Speeds heart rate and damages arteries, causing
furring of artery walls (atherosclerosis). This leads
to heart disease and vascular diseases. It is also
addictive.
Carcinogens Damages the DNA of alveoli cells. This can lead to
them reproducing faster than normal, which will cause
a tumour to form. The tumour is the start of cancer.
Carbon Monoxide Attaches permanently to haemoglobin, reducing the
ability of the blood to carry O2
Poisons The list is endless. There are over 5000 poisonous
chemicals in cigarette smoke (e.g. benzene, arsenic,
lead, cyanide etc)
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
h) Transport
All organisms respire (well, nearly all, but according to your syllabus
they all do). Therefore, all organisms need to exchange gases with
their environment.
Phloem: transports sucrose and amino acids up and down the stem
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
In the Roots:
Water enters root hair cells by osmosis. The roots are full of
minerals, which artificially lower the concentration of water inside
the root cells, so water is always drawn into them from the soil.
This enables transpiration to happen even if the soil is very dry.
The roots take the minerals up against the concentration gradient
and is, therefore, an example of active transport.
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
In the Stem:
In the leaf:
You need to know an experiment that can show the effect of the
above factors on the rate of transpiration. The best experiment is
a potometer, which measures how quickly a little bubble of air
moves up a glass tube attached to the bottom of the stem. Adding a
fan, changing the humidity, increasing the temperature etc will all
change the speed the bubble moves up the tube.
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
Transport in Humans:
- Smooth edges
- Biconcave shape (increases surface area and allows folding)
- Made in huge quantities
- No nucleus (so more room for haemoglobin)
Platelets – help clot the blood. This stops blood loss and also
prevents microorganisms entering the body.
White Blood Cells – are part of the immune system. There are
two main types; macrophages and lymphocytes.
toxins, cells infected with virus and proteins in large numbers. Antibody
cancerous cells) and engulf and proteins travel in the blood and stick
destroy them. to foreign objects. This helps
because;
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
Aorta
Vena Cava
Pulmonary Artery
Semi-lunar Valve
Cuspid Valve
Vena Cava
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
Blood has to pass through the heart twice to complete a full circuit
of the body (takes about 10 – 20sec). This is called a double
circulation.
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Edexcel IGCSE Revision notes Written by Tim Filtness
Artery, Vein and Capillary:
Artery:
collagen &
connective tissue
smooth muscle
& elastic tissue
lumen (blood)
0.1-10mm
Key Points:
Vein:
collagen &
connective tissue
smooth muscle
& elastic tissue
semilunar valve
lumen (blood)
0.1-20mm
Veins carry low pressure blood towards the heart.
Key Points:
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