Cellular Service Handout

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The Circulatory System: Student Sheet 1

Name: _________________________________________________ Date: ______________

Part 1 – Preview – Video Clip “From the Heart” http://nj.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.stru.circulator/from-the-heart/

Answer the following discussion questions with your small group. Be prepared to share your group’s responses.

 What is the job of the circulatory system? Be specific.

 What does blood circulate that the body needs? (more than one thing!)

 How does the circulatory system keep each cell in an organism alive and healthy?

Part 2 – Interactive “Cellular Service” http://nj.pbslearningmedia.org/resource/tdc02.sci.life.stru.bloodtrekweb/cellular-service/

1. Play the interactive.

2. Read the instructions about how the interactive works . The instructions are located on the bottom left hand side of the interactive.

3. Now click “ BEGIN.

4. Read the information in the bottom box about the lung.

5. Check off the appropriate boxes in the interactive and click “ OK .

” (It is possible to leave some items unchecked.)

6. Fill in your paper chart.

(Next page)

7. Then click “ NEXT LOCATION ”. Repeat steps 4 – 7 for each organ.

The Circulatory System: Student Sheet 1 pg 2

Circle the correct answer from what you learn by completing the “Cellular

Service” interactive.

Organ Pick up? Deliver?

Lungs

Small Intestines

Pancreas /

Endocrine Gland

Target Cells

Lymph Nodes

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Oxygen

Nutrients

Carbon Dioxide

Hormones

Bacteria

Name: _____________________________ Circulatory System

– Cellular Service Homework

Background Essay – Read and answer the questions that follow.

What would it be like to be a cell? The answer depends on the type of cell you happened to be. If you were, say, an amoeba, a single-celled organism, you would use your pseudopod ("false foot") to crawl through your environment in search of food.

Along the way you would absorb oxygen and get rid of carbon dioxide. But what if you were a cell that was part of a larger, more complex organism -- say, one of the ten trillion cells that make up the human body? Assuming that you were not a red or white blood cell, you'd be stuck in one place. You would still have the same needs as the amoeba -- to get food and get rid of wastes -- but you wouldn't be able to move around to take care of those needs. How, then, would you survive?

In order to stay alive and healthy, most of the cells that make up a multi-celled organism rely on blood and related fluids to make pick-ups and deliveries. Blood carries oxygen, mainly within red blood cells, from the lungs to all of the stationary cells in the body. Plasma, the liquid portion of the blood, carries some oxygen as well as nutrients from the small intestine and hormones from various endocrine glands. The blood absorbs waste products produced by the body's cells, such as carbon dioxide, and delivers them to various organs, which then expel the waste products from the body.

Most of the body's cells do not come in direct contact with the blood, which is inside blood vessels, so substances to be delivered and taken away must somehow travel from the blood to the cells. These substances travel through a clear fluid that surrounds all of the body's stationary cells. Actually, that fluid is the plasma portion of the blood. Plasma passes through the walls of tiny blood vessels, called capillaries, in the same way that sweat passes through your shirt on a hot day. When plasma moves through a blood vessel wall, it carries with it the nutrients and hormones it contains.

Oxygen also moves from the blood through the capillary walls.

It might sound as though plasma "knows" that it is supposed to move through a capillary and even what substances need to be delivered to a cell and what ones need to be taken away. This is not so. There is a reason why plasma and the substances it contains move in the "right" direction. There is less oxygen in the plasma that surrounds the cells because that oxygen quickly moves into the cells as the cells burn food (nutrients) for energy. The same is true for the hormones that the cells use to help absorb the nutrients, and it's true for the nutrients as well. When the concentration of oxygen, hormones, and nutrients is greater in the blood than it is in the fluid, or greater in the fluid than it is in the cells, the substances move to where the concentration is lower. At the same time, as cells metabolize food, they create waste products such as carbon dioxide. When the concentration of carbon dioxide is greater in the cells than it is in the plasma, the carbon dioxide moves into the plasma. It then moves from the

plasma into the blood vessels for the same reason. This process, by which a substance moves from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower concentration, is called diffusion.

So where does the plasma go after picking up wastes from the cells? It drains through the lymphatic system -- a network of vessels separate from the blood vessels of the circulatory system. Along the way, it passes through lymph nodes, which filter out unwanted substances such as bacteria. The lymphatic system connects to the circulatory system, where it returns the plasma to the blood.

Discussion Questions

1. What are some of the many functions of blood?

2. How does the blood distribute what the body needs?

3. What needs are met by:

Oxygen?

Nutrients?

Enzymes?

Bacteria?

Hormones?

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