Body Fluids and Circulation: Key Notes

💓 Electrocardiogram (ECG)

  • An ECG uses 3 electrical leads (attached to wrists and left ankle) to track heart activity.
  • Each peak in an ECG has a letter that shows a specific heart action:
    • P-wave = Atria excitation (makes atria contract)
    • QRS complex = Ventricles excitation (starts ventricular contraction → systole begins)
    • T-wave = Ventricles relaxing (end of T-wave = end of systole)
  • 💡 Heart rate = Count QRS peaks over time!
  • ⚠️ Unusual ECG shapes may signal heart problems.

🩸 Blood Vessel Structure

All arteries and veins have 3 layers:

LayerCompositionFun Fact
Tunica intimaSquamous endothelium (inner lining)Innermost layer
Tunica mediaSmooth muscle + elastic fibersThinner in veins
Tunica externaFibrous connective tissueOutermost layer

🚀 Double Circulation System

Two pathways work together:

1. Pulmonary Circulation (Lungs) 🔁

Pathway:
Right ventricle → Pulmonary artery → Lungs → Pulmonary vein → Left atrium
💨 Deoxygenated → Oxygenated blood!

2. Systemic Circulation (Body) 🌍

Pathway:
Left ventricle → Aorta → Arteries → Capillaries (in tissues) → Veins → Vena cava → Right atrium
✨ Delivers O2 & nutrients → Removes CO2 & waste

🌟 NEET Must-Knows

  1. ECG wave meanings (P-wave = atrial depolarization, QRS = ventricular depolarization)
  2. Blood vessel layers (Tunica intima/media/externa differences)
  3. Pulmonary vs. systemic circulation (pathways & blood oxygenation)
  4. Systole timing (starts at QRS complex → ends at T-wave)
  5. Systemic circulation function (O2/nutrient delivery & waste removal)

Keep practicing these pathways – you’ve got this! 👍
Next up: We’ll explore that special digestive-liver connection mentioned at the end!