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Page 1: Respiratory System

Respiratory System

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INTRODUCTION

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Functions

• Provide for gas exchange• Intake of O2• Removal of CO2• Regulate blood pH• Sense of smell• Produces sounds• Filters, warms, moistens air• Water, heat balance

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3 Major Steps

Pulmonary Ventilation• Moving air in and out of lungsExternal Respiration• Gas exchange between alveoli and bloodInternal Respiration• Gas exchange between blood and body cells

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STRUCTURES AND FUNCTIONS

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Upper Respiratory

Nose (nares)• Warm, humidify, filter dust• Olfactory stimuli• Modify vocal soundsPharynx• 3 regions• Tonsils, adenoids here• Eustachian tubes

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Lower Respiratory

Larynx• “Voice box”• Thyroid cartilage• Epiglottis• Cricoid cartilage

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Lower Respiratory

Trachea • Windpipe• Lined with ciliated mucous membrane; traps

dust and moves it upward• C-shaped rings of cartilage keep airway open

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Lower Respiratory

Bronchi, Bronchioles • Bronchi contain cartilage rings• Primary (1° ) bronchi enter lungs• Secondary bronchi branch from 1°, one for

each lobe (3R, 2L)• Tertiary bronchi →→ terminal bronchi• Smaller airways have less cartilage, more

smooth muscle

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Lower Respiratory

Lungs• Right lung has 3 lobes, left has 2• Surrounded by pleural membrane• Tertiary bronchioles divide into terminal

bronchioles• These lead to respiratory bronchioles, which

lead to the alveoli

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Lower Respiratory

Alveoli• This is where gas exchange takes place• Surfactant cells secretes a substance that

keeps the alveoli from collapsing• Macrophages help fight infection

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Pulmonary Ventilation

Volume and pressure are inversely relatedInhalation:• Contraction of diaphragm lowers the muscle

and lung volume ↑• Alveolar pressure ↓• Air enters lungs to equalize pressure

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Pulmonary Ventilation

Exhalation:• Relaxation of the diaphragm raises the muscle

and lung volume ↓• Alveolar pressure ↑• Air rushes out

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Air Flow

Frequency (f): Breaths/min; normal = 12Tidal Volume (TV): volume moved in one normal

breath• Normal = approx. 500ml• About 70% reaches alveoli• 30% remains in airwayMinute Ventilation (MV): f x TV = 6000 ml/min

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Air Flow

Inspiratory Reserve Volume (IRV): volume of air that can be inhaled beyond TV

Expiratory Reserve Volume (ERV): volume of air that can be exhaled beyond TV

Residual Volume (RV): air remaining in lungs after ERV

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Nature of Air

Mixture of gases – N2, O2, CO2, H2O, etc.Each gas exerts a partial pressureSum of partial pressures = atmospheric pressureEach gas diffuses down its pressure gradient• Example: O2 • In air, P = 105 mm Hg• In blood, P = 40 mm Hg

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Breathing ControlBrain Centers:• Medullary rhythmicity area• 2 areas in the ponsFactors:• Voluntary adjustment (cortical)• Chemoreceptors• Limbic system; emotion, anticipation• Body temperature• Pain, airway irritation (cough, sneeze)