The Respiratory System
Download
Report
Transcript The Respiratory System
The Respiratory System
Purpose of the respiratory
system
• To provide a constant supply of oxygen
to keep your body cells functioning
• To remove carbon dioxide from the
body cells
http://www.bbc.co.uk
Organs of the respiratory system
•
•
•
•
•
•
Nose / mouth
Nasal cavity
Pharynx
Epiglottis
Larynx
Trachea
•
•
•
•
•
•
Trachea
Bronchus (bronchi)
Bronchioles
Lungs
Alveoli
Pleura
Diaphragm
Mouth & Nose
• Brings air into the body
• Nasal hairs in nostrils trap dust
Nasal cavity
• Warms & moistens air
• Glands that produce sticky mucus line
the nasal cavity
– traps dust, pollen, and other materials that
were not trapped by nasal hairs
– cilia sweep mucus and trapped material to
the back of the throat where it can be
swallowed
Pharynx
• Tube-like passageway used by food,
liquid, and air
• At the lower end of the pharynx is a flap
of tissue called the epiglottis
– covers the trachea during swallowing so
that food does not enter the lungs
Larynx
• “Voice box”
• The airway to which two pairs of
horizontal folds of tissue, called vocal
cords, are attached
Trachea
• Air-conducting tube
• Connects the larynx with the bronchi
• Lined with mucous membranes and
cilia
• Contains strong cartilage rings
Bronchi
• Two short tubes that branch off the
lower end of the trachea
• Carry air into the lungs.
• Singular - bronchus
Bronchioles
• Tiny branches of air tubes in the lungs
• Connect bronchi to alveoli
Alveoli
• Tiny, thin-walled, grapelike clusters at
the end of each bronchiole
• Surrounded by capillaries
• Where carbon dioxide and oxygen
exchange take place
• Singular - alveolus
Gas Exchange Between Blood
and Alveoli
http://mhln.com
Pleura
• Membrane lining the lungs and chest
cavity
Diaphragm
• Muscle wall between the chest and the
abdomen that the body uses for breathing
http://mhln.com
Relationship to digestive system
• Cellular respiration requires
glucose and oxygen to release
energy to the body
• C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy
• Oxygen is provided by the respiratory
system
• Glucose is provided by the digestive
system
• (glucose is made during photosynthesis)
Upper Respiratory
Lower Respiratory
Regulation of Breathing
Lung Capacity
Breathing
Inspiration/Expiration: air in/air out
Cycle:
Relaxed state: diaphragm and intercostal muscles
relaxed
Inspiration: diaphragm contracts, pulling muscle
down, intercostal muscles contract elevating chest
wall and expanding volume of chest, lowering
pressure in lungs, pulling in air
Expiration: muscles relax, diaphragm resumes
dome shape, intercostal muscles allow chest to
lower resulting in increase of pressure in chest and
expulsion of air
Lung Function
Lung volumes and vital capacity
Tidal volume: volume of air inhaled and
exhaled in a single breath
Dead space volume: the air that remains in
the airways and does not participate in gas
exchange
Vital capacity: the maximal volume that can
be exhaled after maximal inhalation
Inspiratory reserve volume: the amount of air
that can be inhaled beyond the tidal volume
Lung Function
Lung volumes and vital capacity
(continued)
Expiratory reserve volume: the amount of
air that can be forcibly exhaled beyond the
tidal volume
Residual volume: the amount of air
remaining in the lungs, even after a
forceful maximal expiration
Measurement: spirometer