Blood
Blood vessels
Structure of the heart
Cardiac Cycle
Cardiovascular disease
100

This component of blood transports oxygen from the lungs to the body tissues. 

Red blood cells.

100

These blood vessels have thick muscular walls to withstand high pressure. 

Arteries
100

These are the two upper chambers in the heart.

Atria

100

This term describes contraction of the heart muscle

Systole

100

This disease is caused by a lack of clotting factors, leading to excessive bleeding.

Hemophilia. 

200

There are more of these cells during an infection.

White blood cells.

200

These structures prevent back flow of blood in veins 

One-way valves.

200

This large artery carries oxygenated blood from the left ventricle to the body.

Aorta

200

This is the internal pace maker of the heart.

Sinoatrial node

200

This condition occurs when a clot blocks the blood flow to the brain.

Ischemic stroke

300

These long threads form a network that trap red blood cells in a clot.

Fibrin

300

These structures open or close to control blood flow in capillary beds. 

Precapillary sphincters

300

This chamber has the thickest myocardium in the heart. 

Left ventricle.

300

Which valves open when the ventricles contract?

The aortic and pulmonary semilunar valves. 

300
Anemia and sickle cell anemia both affect red blood cells. Explain one key difference between their causes.

Anemia - caused by low red blood cell numbers or low hemoglobin

Sickle cell anemia - genetic condition that produces abnormally shaped red blood cells. 

400

These cells produce every type of blood cell in the body.

Hematopoietic stem cells.
400

Why are capillary walls only one cell thick?

To allow for efficient diffusion of gases, nutrients, and wastes between blood and tissues.

400

A red blood cell has just left the lungs carrying oxygen. List the six next structures (including valves) it will pass through in the heart before reaching the body.

Pulmonary veins --> left atrium --> left atrioventricular (bicuspid) valve --> left ventricle --> aortic semilunar valve --> aorta

400

These small fibres are the last structures the electrical signal reaches before the ventricles contract.

Purkinje fibres 

400
Name two major risk factors for athlerosclerosis.
Examples: high cholesterol diet, smoking, high blood pressure, diabetes, lack of exercise, poor diet, family history. 
500

What is the role of thrombin in blood clotting?

Converting fibrinogen into fibrin.

500

How do vasoconstriction and vasodilation regulate blood flow?

Muscles in arteries constrict to reduce vessel diameter (in vasoconstriction) or relax to increase vessel diameter (in vasodilation) to control blood flow and blood pressure. 

500

What is the septum and what function does it serve? 

A muscular wall that separates the left and right sides of the heart to prevent mixing of oxygenated and deoxygenated blood. 

500

Explain why atrioventricular valves close during ventricular systole.

Pressure in the ventricles becomes higher than in the atria, forcing the AV valves to close. This prevents backflow into the atria.

500

How does vasoconstriction of arteries affect blood pressure, and why?

Vasoconstriction increases blood pressure by narrowing the vessel diameter, which increases the resistance to blood flow. This requires higher pressure to move blood through the vessels. 

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