1. Name the components of the
formed elements in the blood and mention one major function of each of
them.
Solution: Blood
corpuscles are the formed ele-ments in the blood, they constitute 45% of the
blood. Formed elements are – (erythrocytes, RBCs or red blood corpuscles),
(leucocytes, WBCs or white blood corpuscles) and throm¬bocytes or blood
platelets. The major function of RBCs is to transport oxygen from lungs to body
tissues and COz from body tissues to the lungs. White blood cells provide
immunity to the body. Blood platelets play important role in blood clotting.
2. What is the importance of
plasma proteins?
Solution: Plasma proteins
constitute about 7 to 8% of plasma. These mainly include albumin, globulin,
prothrombin and fibrinogen. Prothrombin and fibrinogen are needed for blood
clotting. Albumins and globulins retain water in blood plasma and helps in
maintaining osmotic balance. Certain globulins
3. Match Column I with Column
II.
Column I
Column II
(a) Eosinophils (i)
Coagulation
(b) RBC
(ii) Universal recipient
(c) AB Group
(iii) Resist
infections
(d) Platelets
(iv) Contraction of heart
(e) Systol
(v) Gas transport
Solutlion.(a)
– (iii); (b) – (v); (c) – (ii); (d) – (i); (e) – (iv).
4. Why do we consider blood
as a connective tissue?
Solution: A
connective tissue connects different tissues or organs of the body. It consists
of living cells and extracellular matrix. Blood is vascular connective tissue,
it is a mobile tissue consisting of fluid matrix and free cells. Blood
transports materials from one place to the other and thereby establishes
connectivity between different body parts.
5. What is the difference
between lymph and blood?
Solution: The
differences between blood and lymph are given below:
6. What is meant by double
circulation? What is its significance?
Solution: The
type of blood circulation in which oxygenated blood and deoxygenated blood do
not get mixed is termed double circulation. It includes systemic circulation and
pulmonary circulation. The circulatory pathway of double circulation is given in
the following flow chart.
Flow chart: Double blood circulation Double circulation or
separation of systemic and pulmonary circulations provides a higher metabolic
rate to the body and also allows the two circulations to have different blood
pressures according to the need of the organs they supply.
7. Write the differences
between:
(a)
Blood and lymph
(b) Open and closed system of
circulation
(c) Systole and diastole
(d) P-wave and T-wave
Solution: (a) Refer
answer 5.
(b) The differences between open and closed circulatory system are
given below:
(c) Systole is contraction of heart chambers in order to pump
out blood while diastole is relaxation of heart chambers to receive blood. The
contraction of a chamber or systole decreases its volume and forces the blood
out of it, whereas its relaxation or diastole brings it back to its original
size to receive more blood.
(d) P wave is a small upward wave of
elec-trocardiograph that indicates the atrial depolarisation (contraction of
atria). It is caused by the activation of SA node. T-wave is a dome shaped wave
of electro-cardiograph which represents ventricular repolarisation (ventricular
relaxation).
8. Describe the evolutionary
change in the pattern of heart among the vertebrates.
Solution: Vertebrates
have a single heart. It is a hollow, muscular organ composed of cardiac muscle
fibres. Two types of chambers in heart are atria and ventricles. The heart of
lower vertebrates have additional chambers, namely sinus venosus and conus
arteriosus or bulbus arteriosus or truncus arteriosus. During the course of
development, in higher vertebrates, the persistent portions viz, auricles and
ventricles are retained. However, these get complicated by incorporating several
valves inside them and becoming compartmentali sed.
In fishes, heart is two
chambered (1 auricle and 1 ventricle). Both the accessory chambers, sinus
venosus and conus arteriosus are present. The heart pumps out deoxygenated blood
which is oxygenated by the gills and sent to the body parts from where
deoxygenated blood is carried to the heart. It is called single circulation and
heart is called venous heart. Lung fish, amphibians and reptiles have three
chambered heart, (2 auricles and 1 ventricle). The left atrium gets oxygenated
blood from the gills/lungs/skin/buccopharyngeal cavity and the right atrium
receives the deoxygenated blood from other body parts. But both oxygenated and
deoxygenated blood get mixed up in single ventricle which pumps out mixed blood.
This is called incomplete double circulation.
Crocodiles, birds and mammals
have a complete four chambered heart (right and left auricles; right and left
ventricles). Oxygenated and deoxygenated blood never get mixed. Right parts of
the heart receive deoxygenated blood from all other body parts and send it to
lungs for oxygenation whereas left parts of heart receive oxygenated blood from
lungs and send it to other body parts. This mode of circulation is termed as
complete double circulation which includes systemic and pulmonary circulation.
There are no accessory chambers in heart of birds and mammals.
9. Why do we call our heart
myogenic?
Solution: The heart
of molluscs and vertebrates including humans is myogenic. It means heart beat is
initiated in heart itself by a patch of modified heart muscle called sino-atrial
node or pacemaker which lies in the wall of the right atrium near the opening of
the superior vena cava.
10. Sino-atrial node is
called the pacemaker of our heart. Why?
Solution: Sino-atrial
node (SAN) is a mass of neuromuscular tissue which lies in the wall of right
atrium. It is responsible for initiating and maintaining the rhythmic
contractile activity of the heart. Therefore, it is called the pacemaker.
11. What is the significance
of atrio-ventricular node and atrio-ventricular bundle in the functioning of
heart?
Solution:
atrio-ventricular node (AVN) is a mass of neuromuscular tissue, which is
situated in wall of. right atrium, near the base of inter-atrial septum. AV node
is the pacesetter of the heart,- as it transmits the impulses initiated by SA
node to all parts of ventricles. Atrio-ventricular bundle (A-V bundle) or bundle
of His is a mass of specialised fibres which originates from the AVN. Within the
myocardium of the ventricles the branches of bundle of His divide into a network
of fine fibres called Purkinje fibres. The bundle of His and the Purkinje fibres
convey impulse of contraction from the AVN to the myocardium of the
ventricles.
12. Define a cardiac cycle
and the cardiac output.
Solution: The
sequential events in the heart which are repeated cyclically is called cardiac
cycle and it consists of systole (contraction) and diastole (relaxation) of both
the atria and ventricles. The duration of a cardiac cycle is 0.8 seconds.
Periods of cardiac cycle are atrial systole (0.1 second), ventricular systole
(0.3 second) and complete cardiac diastole (0.4 second).
The amount of blood
pumped by heart per minute is called cardiac output. It is calculated by
multiplying stroke volume (volume of blood pumped by each ventricle per minute)
with heart rate (number of beats per minute). The heart of normal person beats
72 times per minute and pumps out about 70 mL of blood per beat. Therefore,
cardiac output averages 5000 mL or 5 litres.
13. Explain heart
sounds.
Solution: The
beating of heart produces characteristic sounds which can be heard by using
stethoscope. In a normal person, two sounds are produced per heart beat. The
first heart sound Tubb’ is low pitched, not very loud and of long duration. It
is caused partly by the closure of the bicuspid and tricuspid valves and partly
by the contraction of muscles in the ventricles.
The second heart sound
‘dubb’ is high pitched, louder, sharper and shorter in duration. It is caused by
the closure of the semilunar valves and marks the end of ventricular
systole.
14. Draw a standard ECG and
explain the different segments in it.
Solution: ECG
is graphic record of the electric current produced by the excitation of the
cardiac muscles. The instrument used to record the changes is an
electrocardiograph. A normal electrogram (ECG) is composed of a P wave, a QRS
wave (complex) and a T wave. The P Wave is a small upward wave that represents
electrical excitation or the atrial depolarisation which leads to contraction of
both the atria (atrial contraction). It is caused by the activation of SA node.
The impulses of contraction start from the SAnode and spread throughout the
artia.
The QRS Wave (complex) represents ventricular depolarisation
(ventricular contraction). It is caused by the impulses of the contraction from
AV node through the bundle of His and Purkinje fibres and the contraction of the
ventricular muscles. Thus this wave is due to the spread of electrical impulse
through the ventricles.
The T Wave represents ventricular repolarisation
(ventricular relaxation). The potential generated by the recovery of the
ventricle from the depolarisation state is called the repolarisation wave. The
end of the T-wave marks the end of systole.
ECG gives accurate information
about the heart. Therefore, ECG is of great diagnostic value in cardiac
diseases.