PNB 2265 Lecture Notes - Lecture 6: Cardiac Tamponade, Pericardial Fluid, Cardiac Muscle Cell

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Tube, send blood to tissues, need flow. Fluids move through tube from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure. Need pressure in order to have blood flow. Change volume in closed system (decrease), increase pressure, blood flow in both directions. Must have pressure in order to flow. Blood does not travel in two directions like in the chamber, blood travels in single direction. Pumping supplies the pressure to move through a set of capillaries. But (cid:449)e ha(cid:448)e t(cid:449)o (cid:272)apillary (cid:271)eds, a(cid:374)d o(cid:374)e pu(cid:373)p (cid:272)a(cid:374) o(cid:374)ly pu(cid:373)p to o(cid:374)e (cid:272)apillary (cid:271)ed: pulmonary: exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide (in lungs, systemic: blood flow out to tissues (skeletal muscle, gi tract) One pump is needed for systemic circulation. One pump is needed for pulmonary circulation. Pumps work in series: two pumps connected to each other, divide heart almost mid-sagittal. Pump equivalent volumes: same amount of blood coming out of each ventricle.

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