Human Body Systems
How does blood flow through your body?
The Circulatory System
Blood
Blood Vessels
CHALLENGE TIME!! Who is Dr. Charles Drew? Why is he considered a "Great America"?
QUESTION????? What is your heart's purpose?
Science Rocks!!
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Are all hearts the same?
Did you know that all vertebrate hearts are not the same? A mammal heart is different from a fish heart, for example, even though both mammals and fish are vertebrates. Birds and mammals (humans are mammals) have a 4-chambered heart that separates oxygen-rich and oxygen-depleted blood. Fish have a 2-chambered heart. Amphibians have a 3-chambered heart with two atria and one ventricle. Some reptiles have a partial separation of the ventricle but others have a 4-chambered heart
What can you do to keep a healthy heart?
Those who are at a higher risk of suffering a heart attack or stroke (brain attack) are those who are overweight, are smokers, have high cholesterol, high blood pressure (hypertension), or diabetes. Follow this Healthy Heart Prescription http://learn.fi.edu/learn/heart/healthy/healthy.html to have a healthy heart for the rest of your life.
The Respiratory System
TO BREATHE OR NOT TO BREATHE???
THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM
The digestive system acts in stages to digest our food. Each stage is important and prepares the food for the next stage. The entire length of our digestive system is around 20 to 30 feet!
Here are the major stages of the digestive system:
1. Chewing - Chewing is the first stage of the digestive system. When you chew your food it breaks up big pieces into little pieces that are easier to digest and swallow. Also, your saliva is more than just water. It has special enzymes in it that start to break down starchy food (potatoes, bread) while you chew.
2. Swallowing - Swallowing may seem like a simple process to us. It just sort of happens. But food doesn't just fall down our throats into our stomach. First, our tongue helps to push food into the back of our throat. Then there are special throat muscles that force the food down into a long tube that leads to our stomach, called the esophagus. The food doesn't just fall down the pipe, muscles push the food along until it gets to our stomach. At the same time all this is going on, a flap blocks off our windpipe making sure food doesn't go the wrong way. We call this "going down the wrong pipe" and it can make us choke. This flap is called the epiglottis and, fortunately for us, it works automatically.
3. Stomach - The next stage is the stomach. Food hangs out in the stomach for around four hours. While the food sits there, more enzymes go to work on it, breaking down things like proteins that our bodies can use. The stomach kills a lot of bad bacteria as well, so we don't get sick.
4. Small Intestine - The first part of the small intestine works with juices from the liver and pancreas to continue to break down our food. The second part is where the food gets absorbed from the intestine and into our body through the blood.
5. Large Intestine - The last stage is the large intestine. Any food that the body doesn't need or can't use is sent to the large intestine and later leaves the body as waste.
The Liver and Pancreas
The liver and pancreas do a lot to help the digestive system along. Both work with the small intestine. The liver provides bile (stored in the gall bladder) that helps break up fat into smaller bits. The pancreas provides additional enzymes to help digest all sorts of food. The liver also processes the digested food from your blood before it gets sent to various places in your body to be used.
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