Title: THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
1THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vp4zOXOM6wgE
2- Function
- Air distributor (breathing)
- Gas exchanger b/t blood alveoli
- Filters, warms humidifies air
- Speech
- Smell
- Regulates pH (homeostasis)
3- Structure
- Upper Tract
- Nose
- Parts
- external nares,
- internal nares,
- nasal cavities separated by nasal septum,
sinuses
4Functions of Nose
- Moistens, warms filters- mucosa, highly
vascular, hairs (vibrissae) - Nasal cavities w/olfactory receptors turbinates
- Resonating chamber for speech
- Olfactory receptors
- Pathology rhinitis, sinusitis
5Pharynx (throat)
- Pharynx muscular
- tubelike (12.5 cm)
- back of mouth
- 3 Divisions
- Nasopharynx (air passageway, uvula, drainage for
internal nares , eustachian tubes of ears
adenoids )
6- Oropharynx air food passageway palatine
lingual tonsils here - Laryngopharynx from hyoid bone to larynx where
it becomes the esophagus
7- Larynx with epiglottis (voice
Box) - Provides permanently
open air passageway - Switching station for
food air - Voice production
(laryngitis) - Composed of nine cartilage rings (epiglottis
being one) membrane ligaments
8Two pairs of folds form divisions
- Vestibular Vocal Folds (false)- upper pair no
part in vocalization - True Vocal Cords- lower pair w/rima glottidis
(slitlike space) glottis
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10- Lower Tract
- Trachea (windpipe)
- Tubelike 11 cm long
- 2.5 cm diameter from
- lower larynx to primary
- bronchi where it divides
- Cartilage rings- C shaped
- hold trachea open
- Mucous membranes w/cilia
- (destroyed by smoking)
11http//www.youtube.com/watch?vd_5eKkwnIRs
- Tracheal obstruction -
- tracheotomy/
- tracheostomy
http//www.google.com/search?qtracheotomyhlens
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12- Bronchial tree
- Right left
bronchi,
branch into
secondary
(lobar) bronchi 3 on
right, 2 on left each serving a long lobe
branch into tertiary bronchi branch into
terminal bronchioles
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14- As branching occurs
- cartilage rings diminish
- mucosal membranes diminish
- smooth muscle increases
- more autonomic control of
- bronchiole diameter
15- Alveoli
- Respiratory bronchioles terminate at alveolar
ducts, to alveolar sacs, to alveoli - Composed of thin
- membrane covered
- with cobweb of
- capillaries
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vsU_8juD3YzQfeature
player_embedded
16- Efficient gas exchange-
- - moist
- - thin-wall
- - blood capillaries
- - increased of alveoli
- - liquid surfactant produced by Type
- II cells (reduce surface tension)
- - shape increases surface area
17- Type II cells in premature babies
- not sufficiently developed to produce enough
surfactant (hyaline membrane is not yet formed) - run an increased risk of breathing problems due
to collapsed lung(s)
18- Lungs
- Occupy the thoracic cavity
- each surrounded by pleural membrane
- 2 lobes on left
- 3 lobes on right
- separated by mediastinum
19- Composed of elastic connective tissue air
spaces - weigh 2.5 pounds
20- Blood to be oxygenated pulmonary arteries,
blood that is oxygenated pulmonary veins - Blood nourishing the lung tissue bronchial
arteries blood carrying lung tissue waste
bronchial and pulmonary veins
21- Pleura secrete lubricant
- Visceral- covers outer surface of lungs
- Parietal- lines thoracic cavity
- Pleurisy-
- Pleural
- inflammation
http//www.google.com/hlengs_rn7gs_ripsy-ab
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22Physiology of the Respiratory System
- Respiratory Physiology- processes that interact
to maintain a stable internal environment
23Pulmonary Ventilation
- Breathing
- Inspiration- moves air into lungs inhaling
- Expiration- moves air out of lungs exhaling
24MECHANICS
- Pressure relationships
- Intrapulmonary pressure
- pressure within the alveoli of lungs
- always equal to the atmospheric pressure
25- The pressure exerted by gases in the atmosphere
outside the body at sea level is - 760 mm Hg
- This is the pressure required to move a given
amount of mercury 760 mm up a glass column - Written as 1 atm
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vq6-oyxnkZC0
26- Intrapleural pressure - pressure between parietal
visceral pleura lt4 mm Hg - gt the intrapulmonary pressure
- said to be negative pressure
- due to factors which hold lungs to thorax
opposed by factors acting to pull lungs from
thorax
27- Actelectasis (pneumothorax) lung collapse
- occurs when pressure between intrapulmonary
intrapleural pressure is equalized - Occurs when air is introduced into
intrapleural space - usually due to a
rupture of visceral
pleura or wound to chest
(President Reagan)
28PULMONARY VENTILATION
- Volume changes lead to pressure changes which
lead to the flow of gases to equalize the
pressure - Inspiration
- diaphragm contracts to drop flatten
- external intercostals elevate to expand the ribs
29- thoracic volume increases
- lungs attached to thoracic wall are stretched
- pulmonary pressure drops 1-3 mm Hg and air
rushes in (about 500 ml of air will move with
this pressure change) until pressure is again
equalized
30- Forced inspiration requires other skeletal
muscles (intercostals)
http//www.youtube.com/watch?vdMxE9tGRsaw
31- Expiration
- passive process (rather than muscular in origin)
- dependent on the elasticity of lungs
- muscle relax
- lungs recoil causing thoracic
- lung volumes to decrease, compressing alveoli
- pressure rises 1-3 mm Hg above atmospheric
pressure air rushes out
32- Influencing Physical Factors
- Resistance due to obstruction or constriction
- Compliance deformities ossification or costal
cartilages)
33- lung elasticity (recoil properties) which is
hindered in those with emphysema (elasticity
replaced with fibrous tissue) - alveolar surface tension (produced by water
molecules in the alveoli ) this is a problem in
premies
34GAS EXCHANGE IN THE BODY
- Gas Laws
- Daltons Law Total gas pressure exerted by a
mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the total
pressures exerted by the individual gases in the
mixture. - p1 p2 p3 Pt
35- Pressure exerted by each gas (its partial
pressure P) is proportional to its percentage
in the total gas mixture - Total gas pressure sum total of pressure of
each gas
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37- Henrys Law
- Gases diffuse from high to low pressure
- dependent on temperature membrane types
- Gas mixtures will diffuse in proportion to its
percentage solubility.
38- Example Divers N2 at increasing depth, more
more N2 is forced to dissolve into the system
(much like carbonation in a soda) - CO2 gt CO gt O2 gt N2
- To summarize
- Gases go from high to low concentrations
- Gases diffuse in proportion to their percentage
and solubility
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40- Hyperbaric Conditions
- used in treating asphyxia, CO poisoning, tetanus,
the bends, etc - forces more O2 into the system due to pressure
exerted on the body.
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42EXCHANGE BETWEEN BLOOD TISSUES
- External Gas Exchange (b/t blood lungs)
- gas flows along a concentration gradient
- dependent upon solubility
- PO2 in lungs is higher than in blood (104 mm Hg
vs. 30 mm Hg)
43- PCO2 is lower in lungs than blood (40 mm Hg vs.
45 mm Hg in blood) - Capillaries assist this exchange
- Ex with poor
alveolar
ventilation
PO2 is low
PCO2 is high
small capillaries - larger airways
44- Internal Gas Exchange (b/t blood tissues)
- essentially the same as external
- ependent upon simple, diffusion partial
pressure gradients
45TRANSPORT OF GASES BY BLOOD
- Oxygen Transport
- 2-3 is dissolved in blood
- 98.5 is carried by hemoglobin on RBCs
- Each hemoglobin molecule can carry 4 O2
- Each RBC has 250,000 Hb molecules
- Each RBC can carry 1,000,000 O2 molecules!!!!!!!!
46- At resting levels
- 25 of O2 is unloaded into tissues, leaving 75
still bound to Hb - therefore there is always reserve O2 for the
tissues - inhaling deeply does not increase saturation of
blood by O2
47- Affects of temperature
- high temps low HbO2- and vice versa
- Affinity of O2 for hemoglobin decreases at higher
temps - tissues are hot from work high unloading of O2
- Affects of pH Bohr effect
- Acids (H) bases (OH-) weaken the HbO2 bond
48- Hypoxia inadequate O2 supply to tissues
cyanotic color (blue) - Anemic hypoxia not enough RBCs or amount of
hemoglobin - Stagnant hypoxia blood is impaired or blocked
49- CO Poisoning
- CO has more an affinity for hemoglobin than O2
- HbCO turns skin a bright pink
50- CO2 Transport
- Active body cells produce 200 ml CO2/min which is
carried to lungs - 10 - Dissolved as a gas in plasma
- 30 - Bound to globin (not heme which would
interfere with HbO2 transport) - 60 - Converted to bicarbonate ion and carried by
plasma
51CONTROL OF RESPIRATION
- Neural Mechanisms
- Neurons in medulla depolarize rhythmically
produce oscillating breathing patterns - Impulse travels along phrenic intercostal
nerves to diaphragm external intercostal
muscles contraction
52- Medulla becomes dormant expiration occurs
passively - 12-15 bpm (2 second lapse b/t inspirations with 3
seconds to expire eupnea
53- Pons produces smooth transitions btw inspiration
expiration. When pons medulla are severed,
breathing becomes erratic requiring artificial
ventilation
54- Factors controlling rate depth
- Irritants
- Hering-Breuer Reflex stretch receptors in
pleural membrane trigger expiration (prevent
over-inflation) - Hypothalmic control in response to emotion /or
pain
55- Cortex control during singing or swallowing
- Chemical factors
- chemoreceptors in medulla, in great vessels of
neck - read increasing CO2 levels
56- Hypercapnia
- H ions that diffuse into cerebrospinal fluid
- trigger rate increase from respiratory center
hyperventilation - Explains panting observed in diabetics who have
elevated blood sugar levels
57- Low CO2 (NOT low O2 levels) levels triggers
apnea or periods of breath holding. - Chronic respiratory diseases will cause a shift
in way medulla monitors blood.
58- Metabolic factors drop in blood pH due to
accumulation of lactic acid or fatty acids (of
diabetics) will trigger a respiratory rate
increase
59- Adjustments from exercise
- Deep breathing from exercise is due to the muscle
inability to utilize available O2 lactic acid
buildup, repayment of O2 debt
60- At high altitudes
- Air pressure is lower, therefore PO2 is lower
acclimatization is necessary - Decrease in PO2 causes receptors to be more
responsive to increased CO2 hyperventilation to
restore previous gas levels
61- Within a few days, minute respiratory volume is
stabilized at 2-3L/min higher than before - Slightly lower hemoglobin saturation at higher
altitudes because - less O2 is available
- Hemoglobin has lower affinity for O2 at high
altitudes so more O2 is unloaded at one time
62- This is all okay at rest, but during physical
activity, hypoxia of tissues occurs - To compensate, the body produces more RBCs,
which takes some time
63SMOKING GALLERY
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