Double circulatory system

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Double Circulatory System
In the first circuit, the blood is pumped to the lungs, where it acquires oxygen. It then returns to the heart and enters the second circuit, going to the rest of the body, eventually, after having been deoxygenated, returning once again to the heart.

The double circulatory system of blood flow references two distinct and separate systems. This distinction is shared by most vertebrates to varying degrees to include amphibians, birds and mammals (including humans.) In contrast, fish have a single circulation system because they lack lungs. Most animals living above the water require a double circulatory system to allow the added benefit of direct oxygenation from a developed pulmonary circuit. Embryology of the human circulatory system is an advanced study of the double circulatory system as the distinction between Right Heart and Left Heart is founded.

For example, the adult human heart consists of two separated pumps or flow circuits. One side is dedicated to the right atrium and right ventricle (which pumps deoxygenated blood into the pulmonary circulation). This circuit is very low in pressure incumbent upon systemic resistance. The left circuit inclusive of the left atrium and ventricle (which pumps oxygenated blood into the systemic circulation) is better gated to high pressure. Blood in one circuit must go through the heart to enter the other circuit.

Mathematics remain murky but it appears that summation of imaged Right Ventricular Ejection Fraction plus Left Ventricular Ejection Fraction may not allow a solution of 100% in many cases. European models of Windkessel physiology appear to offer additional mathematical illumination of Diastolic Performance.

Blood circulates through the body at speeds which vary by a factor of one hundred, from 1.2 m/s in the aorta to approximately 1.1 cm/s in the capillaries. Blood Velocity is similarly highly variable. Velocities generated within the large bore heart chambers vary considerable from velocities within the smaller bore vessels of the periphery and lungs. The circulatory system features numerous return paths (out to the kidneys and back, to the liver and back, to the legs and back, etc.), so it is incorrect to think of blood cells travelling the entire circulatory distance. The average adult heart pumps approximately 5 L/min of blood at rest (the cardiac output); with a total blood volume of approximately 5L in an average adult, a blood cell will run through the complete circuit about once a minute, though this depends on what tissue it circulates to. For example, blood supplying the coronary circulation of the heart muscle itself will return to the pulmonary loop much faster than blood supplying the toes. During intense exercise, the cardiac output can increase fivefold.

Regulation of circulation

Throughout the circulatory system there are many valves. There are 3 main types. The first is the bicuspid valve (mitral valve) which is found between the left atrium (auricle) and the left ventricle. This valve allows oxygenated blood to flow from the left atrium into the left ventricle during ventricular relaxation diastole. The bicuspid valve also prevents the backflow of blood into the left atrium during ventricular contraction (systole). Then there is the tricuspid valve which is found between the right atrium and the right ventricle. This valve allows deoxygenated blood to flow from the right atrium into the right ventricle during ventricular relaxation. It prevents the backflow of blood into the right atrium during ventricular contraction. Finally there are the two semilunar valves, found at the beginning of the arteries leaving the heart. It is called a double circulatory system because it has two loops, one from the heart to the lungs and one from the heart to the rest of the body.

The advantage of a double circulatory system is that blood can be pumped simultaneously into low pressure/compliance (pulmonary/right) and high pressure/compliance (systemic/left) loops.

See also

nl:Dubbele bloedsomloop