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Summary Bsci 202 - Lab Exam 2 Study Guide

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This is a comprehensive and detailed study guide on Lab Exam 2 for Bsci 202. An Essential Study Resource just for YOU!!











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Uploaded on
May 28, 2024
Number of pages
18
Written in
2020/2021
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Summary

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BSCI202 lab blood vessels
General circulation
▪ Closed transport system
▪ Heart → large arteries → medium-sized arteries → arterioles → capillary beds →
venules →medium-sized veins → large veins → heart
▪ Substances diffuse across capillary walls




Microscopic structure (page 364)
▪ 3 tunics surrounding the lumen:
o Tunica intima/ interna
- Innermost layer
- Thin layer of endothelium w/ CT basement membrane
- Continuation of endocardium and with the ventricles in the atria
- Slick surface
o Tunica media
- Circularly arranged smooth muscle and elastic CT
- Allows for changes in lumen diameter
- Lots of smooth muscle & elastic (connective) tissue (because needs strength
and flexibility)
- This layer is not as thick in the venous system as the arteries system
o Tunica adventitia/ externa
- Most superficial
- Areolar or fibrous CT
- Protects and anchors vessels
- Nerve fibers, lymph vessels, blood vessels

 only thing left in the capillary bed is the tunica interna (one
layer of endothelium tissue)

 know that the left side is the tunica media because of the
muscular wall in the artery (even though there is no blood
the artery will hold its shape while a vein would collapse)

,  vein is mostly 2x as large as arteries
Vessel Types (page 365)
▪ Arteries
o Thicker, more structural integrity because under higher pressure
- Under the greatest systemic pressure
o Transport blood away from heart
o Expands during systole, recoils passively during diastole (can be oxygen rich or
not)
o Types of arteries
- Elastic arteries: close to heart, large, “conducting vessels”, most expandable 
the aorta
- Muscular arteries: medium-sized, “distributing vessels”, named arteries in the
body  transporting vessels
- Arterioles: smallest, “resistance vessels”  go into the capillary bed
▪ Capillaries
o narrowest vessels
o Walls = endothelium (one cell layer)
o Involved in gas, nutrient, & waste exchange
▪ Veins
o Transport blood toward the heart
o 65% of blood volume is in veins – Capacitance vessels
o Low pressure vessels because of thin walls and large lumens
o Adaptations for venous return blood to Right Atrium:
- Valves: formed by folds of tunica intima
- prevent back flow
- highly concentrated in limbs

Veins
▪ Adaptations for venous return = cardiac output:
o Skeletal muscle pump: Skeletal muscle contractions squeeze veins (Vascular
regulation) and helps prepull blood up
- And valves close to prevent back flow
- Helps getting blood to the thoracic region
o Pressure from blood coming from capillary beds
- Pushes blood up each segment and can’t go back to the previous one because
there are valves
- Way to get blood back to the heart because the venous system is under low
pressure
▪ Respiratory pump
o During inspiration, a decrease in intra -thoracic pressure (diaphragm will move
down) and increase intra -abdominal pressure causes blood flow from veins in the
abdominal region to veins in the thoracic region
- Creates a vacuum which brings the venous blood up to the heart

Major arteries of system circulation

, ▪ Aorta
o Largest artery in the body
o Leaves from the left ventricle of the heart
o Regions
- Ascending aorta - leaves the left ventricle
- Aortic arch - arches to the left
- Thoracic aorta - travels downward through the thorax (t5 to t12)
- Abdominal aorta - passes through the diaphragm into the abdominopelvic
cavity
- Last two are part of the descending aorta

Page 368
▪ Arterial branches of the ascending aorta
o Right and left coronary arteries serve the heart
▪ Arterial branches of the aortic arch
o Brachiocephalic trunk splits into the
- Right common carotid artery
- Right subclavian artery
o Left common carotid artery splits into the
- Left internal and external carotid arteries
o Left subclavian artery branches into the
- Vertebral artery
- In the axilla, the subclavian artery becomes the axillary artery  brachial
artery  radial and ulnar arteries

Page 369
▪ Arterial branches of the thoracic aorta
o Intercostal arteries supply the muscles of the thorax wall
o Other branches of the thoracic aorta supply the
- Lungs (bronchial arteries)
- Esophagus (esophageal arteries)
- Diaphragm (phrenic arteries)

Page 371
▪ Arterial branches of the abdominal aorta
o Celiac trunk is the first branch of the abdominal aorta.
- Three branches are
- Left gastric artery (stomach)
- Splenic artery (spleen)
- Common hepatic artery (liver)
o Superior mesenteric artery supplies most of the small intestine and first half of the
large intestine
o Left and right renal arteries (kidney)
o Left and right gonadal arteries
- Ovarian arteries in females serve the ovaries
- Testicular arteries in males serve the testes

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