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4BI1

Transport in Humans

Structures and Functions in Living Organisms · 6 question types

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4BI1 Topics

Cell Structure18%
Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport22%
Nutrition & Digestion16%
Photosynthesis20%
Respiration18%
Transport in Plants19%
Transport in Humans15%
  1. Why Humans Need a Circulatory System
  2. The Composition of Blood
  3. Blood Vessels
  4. The Heart
  5. The Double Circulation
  6. White Blood Cells and the Immune Response
  7. Coronary Heart Disease
  8. Platelets and Blood Clotting
  9. Heart Rate and Exercise
  10. Blood Groups and Transfusion
Excretion12%
Coordination & Response14%
Homeostasis16%

Frequency legend

High (≥14%)
Above avg (10 to 13%)
Average (<10%)

Exam Frequency Analysis

Past paper frequency (2018 to 2024)

This topic accounts for approximately 15% of your exam marks.

stable
Very High
Stable15%

The heart, blood vessels, and blood components are regularly tested, particularly structure-function links.

A human body contains around 37 trillion cells, most of them buried deep inside organs many centimetres from the body's surface. Every one of these cells needs a constant supply of oxygen, glucose, water, mineral ions, hormones and other essentials, and a fast way to get rid of waste carbon dioxide, urea and heat. Diffusion alone is far too slow to do this on a body-wide scale, so humans (and most other large animals) have a circulatory system: a closed loop of vessels through which blood is pumped by the heart.

The system has three parts:

  • A pump (the heart)
  • A network of vessels (arteries, capillaries, veins)
  • A transport fluid (the blood)

Together they deliver substances to every cell in the body and carry the waste products away to the organs that excrete them.

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The Composition of Blood