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THE MAMMALIAN CIRCULATORY
SYSTEM
To sustain metabolic activity, all organisms must
exhange materials with their environment. In particular,
animals must exchange the gases O2
and CO2 as part of aerobic cellular
respiration across the membrane of every cell.
But most of a large animal's cells are much too
far away from a respiratory surface to employ
simple diffusion. Consequently, in large animals,
specialized circulatory systems transfer
oxygen, nutrients, hormones, and other materials
to the cells and remove metabolic wastes.
Circulatory systems consist
of three parts:
1. blood, composed
of connective tissue cells dispersed in a fluid
called plasma
2. blood vessels that carry the blood
3. a pumping organ, usually a heart, that
circulates the blood. This tutorial examines a
typical mammalian circulatory system that
of humans.
Mammal circulatory systems are
divided into two circuits: pulmonary and
systemic. The pulmonary circuit carries
deoxygenated blood from the heart to the respiratory
surface in the lungs, where it is reoxygenated,
and then back to the heart. The systemic circuit
carries oxygenated blood to all the body's cells
via arteries, and deoxygenated blood back
to the heart via veins. The mammalian double
circulatory system is efficient because it uses
a separate pump (the two ventricles) to power
each circuit.
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