BIOL 252 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Venae Cavae, Simple Squamous Epithelium, Pulmonary Vein

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3 Dec 2021
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Fibrous pericardium: tough outer layer with collagen bundles. Serious pericardium: thin inner layer of serious uid. Uid that acts as a lubricant during heart contractions. Epicardium: thin layer of areolar (loose) connective tissue with fat droplets. Myocardium: thickest layer consisting of cardiac muscle cells (monocytes) and extracellular matrix. Endocardium: endothelium -- simple squamous epithelium and connective tissue. Vena cava will receive doeoxyganted blood form tissue into right atrium. Then goes into right ventricle, and pumped through pulmonary arteries, into pulmonary capillaries. In pulmonary capillaries, oxygen exchange occurs within the alveoli. The oxygenated blood is pumped into the left side of the heart by the pulmonary vein into the left atrium, then into left ventricle, which will then leave via aorta. Oxygenated blood is then pumped to the body into the systemic capillaries. Oxygen is delivered, and exchanged with co2 via hemoglobin. Superior and inferior vena cava -- brings deoxygenated blood back to the heart (right atrium)

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