respiratory system

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Respiratory System. Respiration. 4 PROCESSES. Breathing External Respiration Internal Respiration Cellular Respiration. Trachea. epiglottis. thyroid cartilage. vocal cord. tracheal cartilages. The Trachea. posterior. esophagus. hyaline cartilage ring. lumen. Mucus membrane. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 2: Respiratory System

1.Breathing2.External Respiration3.Internal Respiration 4.Cellular Respiration

4 PROCESSES

Page 3: Respiratory System
Page 5: Respiratory System

The Trachea

The Trachea

hyaline

cartilage ring

esophagus

posterior

anterior

lumenMucus membrane

submucosa

adventiti

a

Page 6: Respiratory System

The TracheaThe Trachea

Page 7: Respiratory System

• True vocal cords are inferior to false vocal cords• Sound is produced when expelled air is passing

through the larynx over the vocal cords

Page 8: Respiratory System

Epithelial Lining of the TracheaEpithelial Lining of the Trachea

mucus

cilia

Page 9: Respiratory System
Page 10: Respiratory System
Page 11: Respiratory System
Page 12: Respiratory System

alveolar macrophage

type I alveolar cell

type II alveolar cell (surfactant

secreting cell)

pulmonary capillaries

O2

CO2

Page 14: Respiratory System

Hemoglobin StructureHemoglobin Structure

1 RBC contains 250 million hemoglobin molecules

Hemoglobin- quaternary structure2 chains and 2 chains

Page 15: Respiratory System

Uptake of Oxygen by Uptake of Oxygen by Hemoglobin in the LungsHemoglobin in the Lungs

O2 binds to hemoglobin to form oxyhemoglobin

O2

oxyhemoglobin

High Concentration of OHigh Concentration of O2 2 in Blood Plasmain Blood Plasma

High pH of the Blood PlasmaHigh pH of the Blood Plasma

Page 16: Respiratory System

OO2 2 pickup COpickup CO22 release release

Page 17: Respiratory System

Unloading of Oxygen from Unloading of Oxygen from Hemoglobin in the TissuesHemoglobin in the Tissues

When OO22 is releaseddeoxyhemoglobin

Low Concentration of OLow Concentration of O2 2 in Blood Plasma in Blood Plasma

Lower pH of the Blood PlasmaLower pH of the Blood Plasma

Page 18: Respiratory System

OO2 2 releaserelease COCO22 pickup pickup

Page 19: Respiratory System

Carbon Dioxide Carbon Dioxide Chemistry in the Chemistry in the

BloodBlood

COCO22 + H + H22O O HH22COCO3 3 HCOHCO33-- + H + H++

carbonic carbonic acidacid

bicarbonatebicarbonateionion

Page 20: Respiratory System

Transport of Carbon Transport of Carbon Dioxide from the Tissues Dioxide from the Tissues

to the Lungsto the Lungs

• 60-70% as bicarbonate dissolved in the plasma (slow reaction)• 7-10% dissolved in the plasma as CO2

• 20-30% bound to hemoglobin as HbCO2

CO2 + hemoglobin HbCO2

Page 21: Respiratory System

2 muscles involved with breathing: • external intercostal muscles • diaphragm

Breathing controlled by:• phrenic nerve from medulla• pons

Page 23: Respiratory System

Lung Lung VentilationVentilation

Inspiration

760 mm Hg

756 mm HgNegative pressure draws air in

Page 24: Respiratory System

Lung Lung VentilationVentilation

Expiration

768 mm Hg

Positive pressure forces air out

Page 25: Respiratory System

Lung VolumesLung VolumesTidal Volume- 500 ml

Vital Capacity- 4800 ml

Residual Volume- 1000-1200ml

Total Lung Capacity- 4400-6400ml

IRV- 2800 ml

ERV- 1000-1200ml

Dead Space- 150 ml

What factors affect lung volume?

Page 26: Respiratory System
Page 27: Respiratory System

Regulation Regulation of of

BreathingBreathing

medulla oblonga

ta

pons

CO2 and H+

triggers breathing reflex in medulla, not presence of O2

phrenic

vegas

Page 28: Respiratory System

Restrictive- more diff. to get air in to lungs• Loss of lung tissue• Decrease in lungs ability to expand• Decrease in ability to transfer O2 and CO2 in

blood

Diseases:Fibrosis, sarcoidosis, muscular disease, chest

wall injury, pneumonia, lung cancer, pregnancy, obesity

Page 30: Respiratory System

Normal lung Smoker’s lung

Lung cancer

Page 31: Respiratory System

1. Heart rate slows2. Blood flow to extremities

constricted3. Blood and water allowed to

pass through organs and circulatory walls to chest cavity.

Page 32: Respiratory System

• Short term, rapid, deep breathing beyond the need for the activity

• Lowers the level of CO2 in blood

Page 33: Respiratory System
Page 34: Respiratory System

INQUIRY

1. Identify the lipoprotein molecule that reduces surface tension within the alveoli so they do not collapse during exhalation.

2. Even after the most forceful exhalation, a certain volume of air remains in the lungs. What is the volume of air called?

3. Describe the physical structure of alveoli.4. What structures warm and moisten incoming

air?5. What body cavity are the lungs located?6. What tissue lines the lungs?7. What stimulates the breathing response?8. Calculate total lung capacity given:RV= 1000, TV = 500, ERV = 1100, IRV = 2500,

VC= 4100