Top Banner
Respiratory System Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor
37

Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Dec 26, 2015

Download

Documents

Oscar Bishop
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Respiratory System

Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor

Page 2: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Function

To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Page 3: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.
Page 4: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.
Page 5: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Upper Respiratory Tract

• Consists primarily of the nose (nostrils and nasal passages)

• Mouth• Nasopharynx• Oropharynx• Laryngopharynx• Larynx

Page 6: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• These structures filter, warm, and humidify inspired air.

• Detects taste, smell, chewing and swallowing of food.

Page 7: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Air enters through your nostrils where small hairs and mucus filter out dust and foreign particles.

• Air passes into two nasal passageways, separated by what is called the septum.

Nostrils and Nasal Passages

Page 8: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Nose Continued…

• Sinuses and nasopharynx: located in the frontal, sphenoid, and maxillary bones

• Sinuses provide speech resonance• Nasopharynx located behind nose and above

throat.

Page 9: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Oropharynx and Laryngopharynx

• Oropharynx posterior wall of mouth• It connects nasopharynx and laryngopharynx• Laryngopharynx extends to the esophagus

and larynx

Page 10: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Contains the vocal cords and connects the pharynx with the trachea.

Larynx

Page 11: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Lower Respiratory Tract

• Consists of the trachea, bronchi, and lungs.• These structures contain a mucous

membrane with hair like cilia which lines the lower tract.

• Cilia cleans the tract.

Page 12: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Trachea

• Extends from the cricoid cartilage• C shaped cartilage rings that protect and

prevent it from collapsing

Page 13: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Bronchi

• The primary bronchi begin at the carina.• Right mainstream delivers air to the right

lung, left mainstream to the left.

Page 14: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Secondary bronchi enter the pleural cavities and the lungs at the hilum and located behind the heart.

Page 15: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Alveoli

• Respiratory bronchioles eventually become alveolar ducts, which terminate in clusters of capillary-swathed alveoli.

Page 16: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Types:

• Type 1 cells are the most abundant. They are thin, flat, squamous cells that gas exchange occurs.

• Type 2 cells secrete surfactant, which is a substance that coats alveolus and promotes gas exchange by lowering surface tension.

Page 17: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Lungs

• Cone shaped, straddle the heart, anchored by root and pulmonary ligaments.

• Right lung is shorter, broader and larger.• 3 lobes (right) & handles 55% of gas exchange• 2 lobes (left)

Page 18: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.
Page 19: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Pleura and Pleural Cavities

• Pleura – membrane that totally encloses lung & composed of a visceral layer and parietal layer.

• Visceral pleura hugs entire lung surface.

Page 20: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Serous Fluid & Functions

• Pleural cavity - space between visceral and parietal layers contains a thin film of serous fluid which…

• Lubricates pleural surfaces• Creates a bond between the layers that

causes the lungs to move the chest wall when breathing.

Page 21: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Thoracic Cavity

• Area surrounded by diaphragm, the scalene muscles and fascia of the neck and ribs, intercostal muscles, vertebrae, sternum, and ligaments (around the circumference)

Page 22: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Mediastinum

• This is the space between the lungs which contains the…

• Heart and pericardium• Thoracic aorta• Pulmonary artery and veins• Venae cavae and azygos veins• Thymus, lymph nodes and vessels• Trachea, esophagus and thoracic duct• Vagus, cardiac, and phrenic nerves

Page 23: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Thoracic Cage

• It is composed of bone and cartilage which supports and protects the lungs, allowing them to expand and contract

• Posterior & anterior

Page 24: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

How You Breathe

• http://youtu.be/NSEzg6TBheY

Page 25: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Inspiration and Expiration

• Breathing simply involves inspiration and expiration

• Both actions rely on respiratory muscle functions and effects of pressure

Page 26: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Rising of the diaphragm and relaxation of the intercostal muscles causes and increase in intrapleural pressure, resulting in expiration

Page 27: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Normal

• External intercostal muscles aid the diaphragm

• Diaphragm descends to lengthen the chest cavity while intercostal muscles contract

• This causes a reduction in intrapleural pressure, resulting in inspiration

Page 28: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

What Affects Breathing?

• Exercise is a major factor of determining breathing because when you exercise your body requires more oxygen

Page 29: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Continued…

• Forced inspiration: when all of your muscles involved in breathing contract while trying to let in more oxygen for the lungs

Page 30: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Continued…

• Active Expiration: internal intercostal muscles contract to shorten the chest’s diameter and depressing the ribs

Page 31: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Nervous System

• Involuntary breathing results from stimulation of the respiratory center in the medulla and the pons of the brain

• Monitors amounts of carbon dioxide in the blood (involuntarily)

• When carbon dioxide levels rise, the rate and depth of breathing increases to eliminate excess carbon dioxide

Page 32: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Medulla also controls the contraction of the diaphragm which produce intrapulmonary pressure which causes inspiration.

• When the workload of your body is increased, efficiency is decreased.

Page 33: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

• Occurs rapidly in millions of tiny alveoli.• Inside these air sacs, oxygen inhaled diffuses

into the blood while carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood into the air (exhaled).

• Then blood circulates throughout the body, delivering oxygen and picking up carbon dioxide.

• Finally blood returns to lungs to be oxygenated again.

Gas Exchange

Page 34: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Acid-Base Balance

• Oxygen taken up into the lungs is transported to the tissues by circulatory system

• Is then exchanged for carbon dioxide produced by metabolism in body cells

• Carbon dioxide can dissolve in blood which forms bicarbonate (base) and smaller amounts of carbonic acid (acid).

Page 35: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Most Common Forms of Lung Diseases…

• Asthma.• Bronchitis.• Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

(COPD)• Emphysema.• Lung cancer.• Pneumonia.• Pulmonary edema.

Page 36: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Respiration Changes With Aging• Structural – lungs become more rigid, alveoli

number decreases as well as size.• 30% reduction in respiratory fluids which heightens the risk of pulmonary infection and

mucus plugs.• Closes airways due to poor ventilation

• Lung tissue degeneration

Page 37: Bryce Hennings & Brooke Taylor. Function To supply oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the blood as it circulates through the body.

Works Cited

“Anatomy & Physiology made Incredibly Easy!” Fourth Edition. Google Images (Diagrams). Norris, Maggie and Siegfried Rae Donna. “Anatomy & Physiology for Dummies.”

"Organs Involved in the Respiratory System." Organs Involved in the Respiratory

System. Web. 29 Apr. 2015.

"Respiratory System | MyVMC." MyVMC. 26 June 2006. Web. 29 Apr. 2015.

"Respiratory System - Breathing; Inspiration (inhalation) and Expiration (exhalation)."

YouTube. YouTube. Web. 29 Apr. 2015.

"Structure of the Respiratory System." Structure of the Respiratory System. Web. 29 Apr.

2015.

"What Controls Your Breathing?" - NHLBI, NIH. Web. 29 Apr. 2015.