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RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

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RESPIRATORY SYSTEM DISORDERS CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING- hypoxia that occurs because carbon monoxide gas binds more readily to hemoglobin than oxygen does. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: RESPIRATORY SYSTEM


1
RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
2
FUNCTION
  • Responsible for supplying oxygen (GAS) and
    disposing carbon dioxide(GAS).
  • It includes the nose, pharynx, larynx, trachea,
    bronchi and lungs.

3
NOSE-
  • FUNCTION- warms, cleans and humidifies air
  • NOSTRILS (EXTERNAL NARES)-
  • NASAL CAVITY- interior of the nose
  • NASAL SEPTUM- midline that separates the nasal
    cavity

4
3 ways nasal cavity protects the lungs
  • 1. RESPIRATORY MUCOSA- lines the nasal cavity
    and warms and moistens the air as it flows past
  • 2. CILIA- (pseudostratified columnar epithelial)
    filter bacteria and other contaminants to the
    throat- (except on cold days when the cilia
    become slow and allow mucus to drip- runny nose

5
3 ways nasal cavity protects the lungs
  • 3. CONCHAE- 3 levels of projections or lobes that
    greatly increase the surface area to allow mucosa
    to take affect SUPERIOR CONCHAE, MIDDLE CONCHAE,
    and INFERIOR CONCHAE

6
PARANASAL SINUSES-
  • cavities in the skull which lighten the skull and
    used for speech resonance (sound different with
    plugged nose)

7
PHARYNX-(THROAT)
  • muscular passageway that carries food and air
  • NASOPHARYNX- top near the nostrils
  • OROPHARYNX- back of the mouth
  • LARYNGOPHARYNX- bottom where esophagus and
    trachea meet

8
LYMPHATIC TISSUE IN THE PHARYNX
  • FIGHTS OF INFECTIONS
  • PHARYNGEAL TONSILS (ADENOIDS)- located high in
    the nasopharynx
  • PALATINE TONSILS-located at the end of the soft
    palate
  • LINGUAL TONSILS- located under the tongue

9
  • LARYNX- (VOICE BOX)- Eight rigid hyaline
    cartilages and EPIGLOTTIS (elastic cartilage flap
    over) routes air and food into the proper
    channel.
  • THYROID CARTILAGE- Adams Apple- largest of the
    cartilage and does the most protection
  • TRUE VOCAL CORDS- (VOCAL FOLDS) vibrate with
    airflow movement

10
Pitch control
  • Intrinsic muscles control tension of the vocal
    cords
  • High tension high pitch
  • Low tension low pitch

11
TRACHEA- (WINDPIPE)- travels from larynx to
bronchi
  • - 10-12 cm (4 inches)
  • - walls are reinforced with C-shaped rings of
    hyaline cartilage
  • -open parts of the ring are against the esophagus
    and allow us to swallow large portions of food

12
TRACHEA
  • -lined with mucosa and cilia which sweep upwards
    away from the lungs
  • In smokers the cilia becomes damaged and the
    mucus can only be removed by coughing (smokers
    cough)

13
Choking occurs in the trachea due to its rigidity
  • HEIMLICH MANEUVER- make a fist and press inward
    and upward just below the xiphoid process of the
    sternum
  • TRACHEOSTOMY- a surgical procedure used when the
    airway is obstructed - cut a hole through the
    trachea just below the larynx and insert a solid
    tube to allow breathing

14
BRONCHI
  • PRIMARY BRONCHI- formed by a division of the
    trachea.
  • Right primary bronchus- is wider, shorter and
    straighter than the left
  • -Bronchi enter the lungs at the center of the
    lobes called the HILUS.

15
BRONCHIAL TREES (respiratory tree)
  • -Once the bronchi come in contact with the lungs
    then it divide into smaller and smaller branches
    called secondary bronchi, tertiary bronchi etc
  • -The smallest are called bronchioles

16
Lungs
17
LUNGS
  • LUNGS - 5 lobes total- 3 on the right and 2 on
    the left
  • -MEDIASTENUM- gap between the lungs that houses
    the heart
  • APEX- is the top the lungs located just under
    the clavicle
  • BASE- is the bottom of the lungs and rests on
    the diaphragm
  • - lungs are covered in Visceral Pleura and the
  • -thoracic cavity is lined with Parietal Pleura-
    (these reduce friction)

18
ALVEOLI- air sacs
  • - 300 to 500 million in the average adult
  • -provide the only site of gas exchange between
    the external environment and the bloodstream

19
RESPIRATORY PHYSIOLOGY
  • How does oxygen (gas) from the environment get to
    the cells and how does carbon dioxide (gas) exit
    the cells and get placed back into the
    environment?
  • RESPIRATION- 4 step process
  • 1. PRIMARY VENTILATION- (BREATHING) moving air
    into and out of the lungs to continually supply
    alveoli with fresh air
  • 2. EXTERNAL RESPIRATION- Diffusion (gas exchange)
    between the pulmonary blood and alveoli

20
RESPIRATION CONT.
  • 3. RESPIRATORY GAS TRANSPORT- Oxygen and carbon
    dioxide must be carried to and from the various
    cells of the body via the bloodstream
  • 4. INTERNAL RESPIRATION- Diffusion (gas exchange)
    between the blood and individual cells (CELLULAR
    RESPIRATION)

21
MECHANICS OF BREATHING- increasing and
decreasing lung volume
  • VOLUME CHANGES LEAD TO PRESSURE CHANGES, WHICH
    LEAD TO THE FLOW OF GASES TO EQUALIZE THE
    PRESSURE.

22
INSPIRATION - air moving into the lungs
  • - DIAPHRAGM - contracts and moves inferiorly and
    flattens out from its dome shape
  • -EXTERNAL INTERCOSTALS- contract and lift the rib
    cage and thrust the sternum forward
  • - lungs which adhere tightly to the thoracic
    cavity walls expand increasing the volume
  • - as volume increases the gas spreads out causing
    a partial vacuum which sucks air into the lungs
    to equalize the pressure with the atmospheric
    pressure

23
EXPIRATION air moving out of the lungs
  • DIAPHRAGM- relaxes back to its bell shape
  • EXTERNAL INTERCOSTALS- relax lowering the rib
    cage
  • - lungs are forced more closely together and
    pressure rises causing air to be expelled
  • In a FORCED EXPIRATION- Internal intercostals
    muscles are activated to help depress the ribcage
    and abdominal muscles contract to help force air
    out.

24
RESPIRATORY VOLUMES
  • TIDAL VOLUME- (VT) -During normal breathing
    approximately 500 mL of air move in and out of
    the lungs.
  • INSPIRATORY RESERVE VOLUME- the amount of air a
    person can inhale more than the tidal volume-
    typically between 2100 and 3200 mL

25
RESPIRATORY VOLUMES
  • EXPIRATORY RESERVE VOLUME- the amount of air
    that can be expelled after tidal expiration-
    typically 1200mL
  • RESIDUAL VOLUME- even after the most strenuous
    expiration you have about 1200mL of air
  • Residual volume is important because it allows
    gas exchange to go on even between breaths and
    keeps alveoli inflated

26
RESPIRATORY VOLUMES
  • VITAL CAPACITY-(VC) the volume of air that can
    be expelled after the deepest inhalation and the
    greatest exhalation- (everything but the residual
    volume)
  • -found by the sum of the tidal volume ,
    inspiratory reserve volume, and expiratory
    reserve volume
  • - typically about 4800 mL in healthy adult males

27
Lung Capacity
28
LUNG CAPACITY
  • SPIROMETER- measures respiratory capacities by
    measuring air volume
  • RESPIRATORY SOUNDS-
  • BRONCHIAL SOUNDS- occur as air rushes through
    the trachea and bronchi (high pitch and louder)
  • VESICULAR SOUNDS- occurs as air fills the
    alveoli (lower pitch, softer and resemble a
    muffled breeze)

29
BREATHING RATES AND BREATHING PROBLEMS
  • EUPNEA- normal respiration rate
  • HYPERPNEA- breathe more vigorously and deeply
  • HYPOXIA- lack of oxygen getting to the cells

30
BREATHING RATES AND BREATHING PROBLEMS
  • APNEA- brief periods where breathing is stopped
    (causes can be anxiety attacks, sleep disorders)
  • CYANOSIS- can occur with extended lack of oxygen-
    (bluish coloration of the skin)

31
FACTORS INFLUENCING RESPIRATORY RATES
  • 1. PHYSICAL FACTORS- increased body temperatures,
    talking, coughing, and sneezing
  • 2. CONSCIOUS CONTROL- (during singing,
    swallowing, and holding of breath) voluntary
    control is limited because when oxygen supply is
    getting low or blood pH falls medulla will take
    over)
  • 3. EMOTIONAL FACTORS- stress, upset, or scared
    are some of the examples
  • 4. CHEMICAL FACTORS- levels of carbon dioxide and
    oxygen in the blood (there is an oxygen sensor in
    the aortic arch and carotid artery)

32
FACTORS INFLUENCING RESPIRATORY RATES
  • Having high levels of carbon dioxide is more of
    a signal to the brain than low levels of oxygen
  • As CO2 levels rise and pH levels drop in the
    blood you begin to breathe more deeply and more
    rapidly this is called --- HYPERVENTILATION

33
FACTORS INFLUENCING RESPIRATORY RATES
  • EXCEPTION- People who retain high levels of
    carbon dioxide due to emphysema and chronic
    bronchitis. Their brain no longer reads the high
    levels of CO2 as important as the low levels of
    oxygen. This is why patients who require
    oxygen are given low levels of oxygen because if
    they were given high levels they would stop
    breathing.

34
DISORDERS
  • CARBON MONOXIDE POISONING- hypoxia that
    occurs because carbon monoxide gas binds more
    readily to hemoglobin than oxygen does. So this
    crowds out (low amounts of CO) or even totally
    displaces the oxygen (high amounts of CO)

35
DISORDERS
  • CHRONIC BRONCHITIS- mucosa of the lower
    respiratory passages becomes severely inflamed
    and produces excessive amounts of mucus. The
    excess mucus impairs ventilation and increases
    the risk of lung infections. Hypoxia and carbon
    dioxide retention occurs.

36
DISORDERS
  • ASTHMA hypersensitive bronchial passages that
    quickly inflame due to irritants (dust mite, dog
    dander, fungi)

37
DISORDERS
  • EMPHYSEMA- the alveoli enlarge and become less
    elastic (fibrosis) and cause the airways to
    collapse during exhale- (patients give incredible
    amounts of energy to exhale)

38
DISORDERS
  • CYSTIC FIBROSIS- (genetic) 1 out of 2400-
    oversecretion of a thick mucus that clogs the
    respiratory system.

39
CARBON DIOXIDE- is transported in plasma as a
bicarbonate ion (HCO3-)
  • CO2 leaves the individual cells and bonds with
    water in the plasma to form carbonic acid which
    quickly separates into H ions and bicarbonate
    ions HCO3 This is what causes the pH levels to
    drop and become more acidic in blood
  • CO2 H2O ? HCO3- H
  • For carbon dioxide to be released for diffusion
    from its bicarbonate ion form it must first bond
    with a hydrogen atom to form carbonic acid
    (H2CO3 ). Then the carbonic acid breaks down to
    form CO2 and H2O and can be released into the
    lungs
  • HCO3- H ? CO2 H2O

40
GAS TRANSPORT
  • SURFACTANT- covers the alveoli reducing the
    surface tension which prevents the alveoli from
    collapsing during expiration
  • OXYGEN is carried through the bloodstream
    attached to hemoglobin to form OXYHEMOGLOBIN
    (HbO2) - (small amount of oxygen is dissolved in
    the plasma)

41
GAS TRANSPORT
  • RESPIRATORY MEMBRANE- where gases flow on one
    side and blood flows on the other side.
  • -Walls of alveoli are composed largely of a
    single, thin layer of squamous epithelial cells.
    (Much thinner than a piece of paper)
  • -Pulmonary capillaries (one cell thick) cover
    the external surfaces of the alveoli for gas
    exchange
  • -Oxygen and carbon dioxide pass through the one
    celled membranes by diffusion.

42
DISORDERS
  • CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE-
    chronic bronchitis and emphysema
  • major cause of death and disability
  • 4 features in common with COPD
  • 1. patients almost always have a history of
    SMOKING
  • 2. DYSPNEA- labored breathing occurs and
    becomes progressively worse
  • 3. coughing and frequent pulmonary infections
  • 4. retain carbon dioxide (HYPOXIC ) and have
    respiratory acidosis
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