respiratory system - general histology...respiratory system objectives • describe the components...

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Respiratory System Kristine Krafts, M.D.

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Page 1: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory SystemKristine Krafts, M.D.

Page 2: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Objectives

• Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system.

• Describe the embryologic steps in the development of the respiratory system.

• Describe and compare the characteristic microscopic features and functions of the different regions and airways of the respiratory system, including lining epithelium, glands, cartilage, smooth muscle and elastic fibers.

Page 3: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion

• Pleura

Page 4: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction• Anatomy• Embryology

Page 5: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction• Anatomy

Page 6: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Anatomy of the respiratory system

Page 7: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Two Functional Parts of the Respiratory Tract

• Conducting portion• Conduct air to and from alveoli• Condition the air (warm, humidify, filter)

• Respiratory portion• Gas exchange

Page 8: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Trachea

Right lung Left lung

Primary bronchus

Secondary bronchi

Bronchiole (1 mm or less in diameter)

Terminal bronchiole

Respiratory bronchiole

Alveolar duct

Alveolar sac

Conductingportion

Respiratoryportion

Page 9: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction• Anatomy• Embryology

Page 10: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Pharynx

Lungs

Esophagus

Gallbladder

Stomach

Liver

Stuff that develops from the foregut

Duodenum (½)

Pancreas

Page 11: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Development of respiratory diverticulum (bud)

Endoderm gives rise to the epithelium and glands of the larynx, trachea, bronchi and the pulmonary epithelium.

Mesoderm gives rise to the connective tissue, cartilage and smooth muscle of the respiratory tract.

Page 12: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• The lung bud divides into two bronchial buds, which divide and form secondary and tertiary bronchi.

• As bronchi develop, the surrounding mesenchyme forms cartilage, smooth muscle, connective tissue and capillaries.

Development of bronchi and bronchioles

Page 13: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• By week 24, respiratory bronchioles are present and lungs are vascularized. Respiration is possible – but chances of survival outside placenta are slim.

• Weeks 24-26: terminal alveolar sacs develop and type II pneumocytes secrete surfactant (decreases surface tension)

• By week 26-28: there are enough alveolar sacs and surfactant to allow a prematurely born infant to survive without medical intervention.

When can the baby breathe?

Page 14: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• 95% of mature alveoli develop after birth!

• The newborn infant has only 1/6 – 1/8 the number of alveoli as adults.

• Most alveolar growth is done by age 8.

Strange but true…

Page 15: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• At birth, the lungs are half-filled with amniotic fluid.

• This fluid is cleared through the mouth and nose by pressure on thorax during delivery. It also is reabsorbed into pulmonary blood vessels and lymphatics.

Lungs at Birth

Page 16: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity• Larynx• Trachea• Bronchi• Bronchioles

Page 17: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• The walls of the conducting system change in thickness and composition from region to region.

• Components include:• Epithelium (“respiratory epithelium”)• Lamina propria• Mucous and serous glands• Cartilage• Smooth muscle• Adventitia

Walls of the Conducting System

Page 18: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory epithelium

Pseudostratified columnar epithelium

Cilia

Goblet cells

Page 19: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Ciliated columnar cells: most abundant cell type. Cilia beat in unison and move mucus and trapped particles to oropharynx, where it is swallowed or expectorated.

• Goblet cells: produce mucus.

• Basal cells: stem cells that replenish epithelium. Hard to see.

• Brush cells: Columnar cells. No cilia but have apical microvilli. Hard to see.

• Neuroendocrine cells: epithelial cells containing hormones. Hard to see.

Respiratory Epithelium Cell Types

Page 20: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity

Page 21: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Respiratory epithelium everywhere except at the top (which has specialized olfactory epithelium).

• Serous and mucous glands and numerous blood vessels in lamina propria.

• Nasal septum: midline structure consisting of bone and hyaline cartilage.

• Nasal fossa: chambers on each side of septum.

Nasal Cavity

Page 22: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity• Larynx

Page 23: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Epiglottis covers laryngeal opening during swallowing.Core of elastic cartilage.Superior surface: nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium.Inferior surface: respiratory epithelium

Laryngeal cartilages support the wall of the larynx and serve as attachments for vocalis muscles.

Vocal folds are covered by nonkeratinized stratified squamous epithelium

False vocal folds are covered by respiratory epithelium

Larynx and epiglottis

Page 24: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

False vocal folds

True vocal folds

Vocalis muscle

Vestibule

Larynx, coronal section

Page 25: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Epiglottis: super low-power view

Page 26: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Epiglottis: elastic cartilage

Page 27: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Epiglottis: elastic cartilage

Page 28: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Larynx: true and false vocal cords

Page 29: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity• Larynx• Trachea

Page 30: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Extends from larynx and divides into two primary bronchi.

• Contains 16-20 C-shaped hyaline cartilage rings with the dorsal opening bridged by smooth muscle (trachealis muscle).

• Lined by respiratory epithelium.

• Seromucous glands in lamina propria and submucosa.

Trachea

Page 31: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Trachea

Trachea divides into 2 primary bronchi.

Page 32: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Trachea: super low-power view

Page 33: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Trachea: respiratory epithelium

Page 34: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Trachea: hyaline cartilage

Page 35: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity• Larynx• Trachea• Bronchi

Page 36: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Trachea divides into two primary bronchi, which divide into secondary bronchi.

• Secondary bronchi divide into tertiary bronchi, which supply bronchopulmonary segments.

• Tertiary bronchi divide into smaller bronchi, which divide into bronchioles.

Bronchi

Page 37: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Bronchi undergo 9-12 branchings.

• As branching progresses:• Connective tissue decreases in thickness• Relative amount of smooth muscle and

elastic tissue increases• Cartilage disappears (gone by bronchioles)

Morphologic Changes as Bronchi Branch

Page 38: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Lung super low-power view

Page 39: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Bronchus

Page 40: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Bronchus

Page 41: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Wall of Bronchus

• Respiratory epithelium (E)• Lamina propria (LP) • Smooth muscle (SM) • Hyaline cartilage (C)• Nerves (N) and blood vessels (V)

Note the order of structures: E à LP à SM à C

Page 42: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Bronchus: respiratory epithelium

Goblet cellsPseudostratifiedcolumnar

epithelium

Cilia

Page 43: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion• Nasal cavity• Larynx• Trachea• Bronchi• Bronchioles

Page 44: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• NO glands or cartilage.

• Larger bronchioles have respiratory epithelium. Smaller bronchioles have low columnar epithelium.

• In asthma, the smooth muscle in the bronchioles constricts, causing difficulty breathing.

Bronchioles

Page 45: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Bronchiole

Smooth muscle

Respiratoryepithelium is

folded

Fibrous connective

tissue is present but no cartilage or glands!

Page 46: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Smaller bronchioles have simple columnar epithelium

Page 47: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Simple cuboidal epithelium with cilia.

• Also: Clara cells (non-ciliated epithelial cells with secretory granules).

• No goblet cells.

• As you go down the respiratory tract, goblet cells are lost before cilia.

Terminal Bronchioles

Page 48: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Terminal bronchiole

Page 49: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Clara cells

Is there anything they don’t do?Make surfactant components, break down mucus,

detoxify harmful substances, transfer IgA, fight bacteria…

Page 50: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion• Respiratory bronchioles• Alveoli

Page 51: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion• Respiratory bronchioles

Page 52: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory bronchioles

• As you go distally along the respiratory bronchioles, alveoli increase in number.

• Cilia are gone by the end of the respiratory bronchiole.

Alveolar ducts

• Back-to-back alveolar openings along wall

• Smooth muscle between alveolar openings looks like knobs

Airways Preceding Alveoli

Page 53: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory bronchiole

Page 54: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Alveolar duct

Page 55: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Alveolar duct (AD), alveolar sac (AS) and alveolus (A)

Page 56: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion• Respiratory bronchioles• Alveoli

Page 57: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Sac-like structures with super-thin walls so O2 and CO2 can diffuse between air and blood.

• Separated by interalveolar septae, which contain capillaries.

• Cells lining interalveolar septae:• Type I cells (thin, flat squamous cells)• Type II cells (pneumocytes): produce surfactant• Alveolar macrophages (dust cells)

Alveoli

Page 58: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Alveolus

Page 59: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Cover 95% of alveolar surface

• Simple squamous cells with thin cytoplasm

• Blood-air barrier includes (from air to blood):• Type I cells• Fused basal laminae of type I cells and

capillary endothelial cells• Capillary endothelial cells

Type I Cells

Page 60: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Cover 5% of alveolar surface.

• Large cuboidal cells with round nuclei.

• Typical secretory cell structure. Lamellar bodies in cytoplasm make and store surfactant.

• Surfactant decreases surface tension in alveoli and prevents collapse of alveoli during expiration.

Type II Cells (Pneumocytes)

Page 61: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Alveoli lined by type I and II cells

Page 62: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• Found on surface of alveoli, within alveoli and in interstitial connective tissue.

• Remove debris and particles that escape mucus and cilia in conducting portion of respiratory tract

Alveolar Macrophages (Dust Cells)

Page 63: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Macrophages (dust cells)

Page 64: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion

• Pleura

Page 65: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

• The outer surface of the lung and the inner surface of the thoracic cavity are covered by the pleura, which is a serous membrane (serosa).

• Parietal pleura lines the thoracic cavity; visceral pleura covers the lungs.

• Serous membranes consist of simple squamous epithelial cells called mesothelium plus a thin layer of connective tissue.

• The pleural cavity contains serous fluid made by the pleura.

Parietal and Visceral Pleura

Page 66: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system
Page 67: Respiratory system - General Histology...Respiratory System Objectives • Describe the components and functions of the conducting and respiratory portions of the respiratory system

Respiratory System Lecture Outline

• Introduction

• Conducting portion

• Respiratory portion

• Pleura