Types of Invertebrate Circulation
1) No circulatory system
2) Open circulatory system
3) Closed circulatory system
No circulatory system
– use simple diffusion
to distribute nutrients. Includes bacteria,
protista, fungi, invertebrate animals.
Open circulatory system
– pumps fluid called hemolymph into sinuses or hemocoel. Includes some mollusca, arthropoda, Echinodermata.
Closed circulatory system
– Use a pumping heart to move blood through vessels. Includes annelida (earthworms)
Vertebrate Circulation
2-chambered hearts (atrium and ventricle)
– fish. Deoxygenated blood fills the heart and is pumped to the gills for oxygen exchange.
3-chambered hearts (2 atriums and 1 ventricle)
– amphibians and reptiles. Poikilothermic chordates. Alligators and crocodiles are exceptions, they have 4-chambered hearts.
4-chambered hearts (2 atriums and 2 ventricles)
– birds and humans. Homeothermic chordates.
Human Heart - Flow of blood through heart
Pulmonary circulation
Pathway of pulmonary circulation
Systemic circulation
Pathway of Systemic circulation
Left atrium → bicuspid / mitral valve → left
ventricle → aortic semilunar valve → aorta → body → vena cava → right atrium
Human Cardiac Cycle
1) SA Node
2) AV node
The SA node (pacemaker)
The AV node
Systole
Diastole
Lub-systole-dub-dystole-lub
heart “lub-dub” sound
Signal Transduction
Measuring Cardiac Cycle
P wave – atrial depolarization
Q wave – depolarization through interventricular septum
R wave – ventricular depolarization
S wave – completion of ventricular depolarization
T wave – ventricular repolarization
Heart rate (HR)
Stroke volume (SV)
Cardiac output (CO)
CO = HR x SV