Smoking - Noadswood Science
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Transcript Smoking - Noadswood Science
Smoking
Learning objective:
To know how a healthy respiratory
system works, and how smoking
effects it
Smoking
• Starter: Complete the following passage:
Deoxygenated blood returns to the heart via the ______. It enters the
___ ____. When this is full the blood flows through the tricuspid
valve into the ____ ____. When the heart contracts the blood is
forced out of the heart through the pulmonary ______, to the
_______, where Carbon dioxide is passed into the air sacs and
_______ diffuses into the blood. It returns to the _____ side of the
heart via the pulmonary_____. It enters the ___ ___. When this is
full it flows through the mitrial valve into the ___ ____. When the
heart contracts the blood is forced out of the heart under ____
pressure through the _______.
Key Words: oxygen, right ventricle, vena cava, left atrium, artery, vein,
aorta, left ventricle, right atrium, lungs, left, high.
Respiratory System
• What does the respiratory system do? What parts does it consist of?
• The respiratory system contains the organs that allow us to get the
oxygen we need and to remove the waste carbon dioxide
It consists of: –
Lungs
– Tubes leading from the lungs to the mouth and nose
– Various structures in the chest that allow air to move
in and out of the lungs
Respiratory System
• Movements of the ribs, rib muscles and diaphragm allow air into and
out of the lungs: this is called breathing or ventilation
• When we breathe in, we inhale
• When we breathe out, we exhale
Air passes between the lungs and the
outside of the body through the
trachea
The trachea divides into two bronchi,
with one bronchus for each lung
Each bronchus divides further in the
lungs into smaller tubes called
bronchioles
At the end of each bronchiole, there is
a group of tiny air sacs called alveoli
Breathing / Ventilation
Breathing in (inhale) - ribs move up and out, diaphragm contracts (pulled down)
Breathing out (exhale) - ribs move down and in, diaphragm relaxes (moves upward)
Breathing
• Complete the breathing
worksheet - stick this in your book
(plus all other work)
Breathing
Gas Exchange
• For respiration to occur, we need to get oxygen from the air to the
blood, and remove waste carbon dioxide from the blood
• Alveoli in the lungs are adapted to make gas exchange happen easily
and efficiently: they cause the lungs to have a very large surface
area; are moist with thin walls; and have many capillaries
The gases move via diffusion (net [high] to [low])
Smoking
• What are the problems of smoking?
• Smoking is very harmful to health, causing ~80% of deaths from lung
cancer, bronchitis and emphysema, and ~20% of deaths from heart
disease in the UK
• Tobacco smoke contains many harmful substances, including: tar;
nicotine; and carbon monoxide
• Second hand smoke is just as dangerous! You’ll get all the health
problems are smoker will…
Smoking Practical
Smoking Problems
• Carbon monoxide – a poisonous gas that reduces the amount of
oxygen that red blood cells carry around the body
• Tar – a brown, sticky substance that consists of tiny particles and is
formed when tobacco smoke condenses. Deposited in the lungs, it
coats the surface of the alveoli
• Nicotine – an addictive drug that affects the central nervous system,
increasing the heart rate and narrowing the blood vessels, causing
high blood pressure
Normal lung (left) verses smokers lung (right)
Cilia
• There are also specialised cells in the lining of the breathing tubes
which produce a sticky mucus to trap dirt and microbes
• Specialised cells called cilia help to move this mucus out of the lungs
• Smoking can damage these delicate cells (hot smoke and tar) and
they are less effective
• This is why smokers cough a lot, trying to move this mucus
Cilia
Task
• Your task is to give your opinion about the smoking ban - is it a good
or bad thing?
• Either way, you need to include the affects smoke has on the
respiratory system, and the associated health problems this can lead
to…