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Your
heart and circulatory system make up your cardiovascular
system. Your heart works as a pump that pushes blood
to the organs, tissues, and cells of your body. Blood
delivers oxygen and nutrients to every cell and removes
the carbon dioxide and waste products made by those
cells. Blood is carried from your heart to the rest
of your body through a complex network of arteries,
arterioles, and capillaries. Blood is returned to
your heart through venules and veins. If all the vessels
of this network in your body were laid end-to-end,
they would extend for about 60,000 miles (more than
96,500 kilometers), which is far enough to circle
the earth more than twice!
The
one-way circulatory system carries blood to all parts
of your body. This process of blood flow within your
body is called circulation. Arteries carry oxygen-rich
blood away from your heart, and veins carry oxygen-poor
blood back to your heart.
In
pulmonary circulation, though, the roles are switched.
It is the pulmonary artery that brings oxygen-poor
blood into your lungs and the pulmonary vein that
brings oxygen-rich blood back to your heart.
In
the diagram, the vessels that carry oxygen-rich blood
are colored red, and the vessels that carry oxygen-poor
blood are colored blue.
Twenty
major arteries make a path through your tissues, where
they branch into smaller vessels called arterioles.
Arterioles further branch into capillaries, the true
deliverers of oxygen and nutrients to your cells.
Most capillaries are thinner than a hair. In fact,
many are so tiny, only one blood cell can move through
them at a time. Once the capillaries deliver oxygen
and nutrients and pick up carbon dioxide and other
waste, they move the blood back through wider vessels
called venules. Venules eventually join to form veins,
which deliver the blood back to your heart to pick
up oxygen.
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The
Heart
The
heart weighs between 7 and 15 ounces (200 to
425 grams) and is a little larger than the size
of your fist. By the end of a long life, a person's
heart may have beat (expanded and contracted)
more than 3.5 billion times. In fact, each day,
the average heart beats 100,000 times, pumping
about 2,000 gallons (7,571 liters) of blood.
Your
heart is located between your lungs in the middle
of your chest, behind and slightly to the left
of your breastbone (sternum). A double-layered
membrane called the pericardium surrounds your
heart like a sac. The outer layer of the pericardium
surrounds the roots of your heart's major blood
vessels and is attached by ligaments to your
spinal column, diaphragm, and other parts of
your body. The inner layer of the pericardium
is attached to the heart muscle. A coating of
fluid separates the two layers of membrane,
letting the heart move as it beats, yet still
be attached to your body.
Your
heart has 4 chambers. The upper chambers are
called the left and right atria, and the lower
chambers are called the left and right ventricles.
A wall of muscle called the septum separates
the left and right atria and the left and right
ventricles. The left ventricle is the largest
and strongest chamber in your heart. The left
ventricle's chamber walls are only about a half-inch
thick, but they have enough force to push blood
through the aortic valve and into your body.
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source:
http://www.tmc.edu/thi/anatomy.html
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