The circulatory system, also known as the cardiovascular system, is critical to maintaining healthy organs, muscles and tissues. It delivers blood, which contains oxygen and nutrients, to all parts of the body and removes unwanted carbon dioxide and waste products.
The cardiovascular system consists of the heart and blood vessels. The blood vessels work with the heart and lungs to continuously circulate blood around the body.
There are two circulatory systems in the body:
The heart
The heart is a muscle, about the size of a fist, in the middle of the chest and works like a pump sending blood around the body.
The heart has a left and right side each with an upper and lower chamber. The right side of the heart receives the deoxygenated blood that has just travelled around the body and pumps the blood to the lungs to collect a fresh supply of oxygen. The left side of the heart pumps the reoxygenated blood around the body again.
The heart’s electrical system tells the heart when to contract and when to relax to keep blood pumping regularly. This is the heart rate and can change for example depending on emotions and if someone is active or resting. A normal resting heart rate is between 60 – 100 beats per minute but can vary due to age and health.
Like the rest of the body, the heart needs to be supplied with oxygenated blood to work properly which is provided by the coronary arteries spread across the outside of the heart. Sometimes the heart and circulatory system don’t work like they should which can cause heart and circulatory diseases, also called cardiovascular diseases, such as coronary heart disease (heart attack and angina) and stroke.
Composition of blood
Blood is made up of:
The blood vessels