the respiratory system. presented by toni davis and niamh mcdonald

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The Respiratory System. Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

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The Respiratory System. Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald. Function of the Respiratory System. What Does The Respiratory System Do?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Respiratory System.

Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Page 2: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Function of the Respiratory System

Page 3: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

What Does The Respiratory System Do?

● The respiratory system takes in oxygen to circulate around the body for many uses such as creating ATP, supplying systems with oxygen for smelling and speaking.

● Also, includes that fibers that filter particles from the outside air to and from the lungs

● Encompasses the whole process by which oxygen is delivered to the cells and used to break down glucose from food, releasing energy.

Page 4: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Structures of the Respiratory System

Page 5: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Lungs● They are covered

by fluid-filled double transparent membrane called the pleura. Beneath the pleura is a dome shaped muscle structure called the diaphragm which contracts and relaxes to expand and relax the lungs.

Page 6: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Bronchial Tree● The bronchial tree

consists of branched air passages that lead from the trachea to the airs sacs.

Page 7: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Nasal Cavity● The nasal concha divide the nasal cavity

into passageways and help increase the surface area of the mucous membrane. The mucous membrane with hairlike projections called cilia, lines the nasal cavity and moistens, filter and warms incoming air. Particles caught in mucous is carried away to the pharynx as a result of the ciliary action, and are eventually swallowed.

Page 8: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Nasal Cavity● The mucous traps

invading germs with antibacterial enzymes, cilia then allows for mucous to be swallowed.

Page 9: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Pharynx● Behind nasal nasal

cavity, oral cavity, and larynx

● Passageway for air and food

● Consists of nasopharynx, oropharynx, and larynopharynx

Page 10: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Larynx

● Conducts air and helps prevent foreign objects from entering the trachea

● Composed of muscles and cartilages

● Lined with mucous membrane

Page 11: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Trachea● Covered with a

ciliated mucous membrane

● Cilia move mucus and trapped foreign matter to the pharynx

Page 12: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Bronchioles● Bronchus

branches from the lower trachea and carry air to the lungs.

● They divide into smaller branches called segmental bronchial , and subdivide smaller and smaller into bronchioles.

Page 13: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Alveoli● Approx 600 million

Alveoli sacs exist on the tips of bronchioles.

● Capillaries in the walls of Alveoli absorb oxygen, and release Co2 and H2O to be exhaled.

Page 14: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Mechanics of breathing

Page 15: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Breathing Mechanism● The action of breathing in and out is due

to changes of pressure within the thorax, in comparison with the outside

● When you inhale, intercostals muscles move rib cage upwards and out

● Increase in size and decreases internal pressure and air from outside rushes into the lungs to equalize the pressures

Page 16: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Breathing Mechanism● When you exhale,

the diaphragm and intercostal muscles relax and return to their resting positions

● Reduces size of Thoracic cavity, increasing pressure and forcing air out of the lungs

Page 17: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Pathway of air

● With each breath...– Person clinches diaphragm, making a

vacuum that air is drawn into– The air enters trachea moving through one

of the two bronchial tubes– They branch into smaller into smaller

bronchioles ending in alveoli (small sacs)– Alveoli contain capillaries in the walls. Red

blood cells that carry carbon dioxide from the body trades the carbon for oxygen in air by diffusion

Page 18: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Pathway of Air (cont.)

● Oxygenated blood travels all over the body, supply oxygen when needed

● Diaphragm relax, carbon dioxide rushes out of the alveoli, through bronchioles and bronchial tubes, out of the trachea and out of the body

Page 19: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The Respiratory System in the brain

Page 20: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Respiratory Center of The Brain

Groups of neurons scattered through the pons and Medulla Oblongota make up the respiratory center of the brain.

The Medullary Rhythmycity area have two neuron groups: Dorsal and Ventral that extend the length of the Medulla Oblongota

Page 21: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Dorsal Respiratory

This controls the basic rhythms of inspiration. Neurons emit bursts of impulses that signal the Diaphragm and the other breathing muscles to contract.

Page 22: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Ventral Respiratory

This group usually is very quiet when breathing normally, but if you are more active and have more forceful breathing, like in exercise, this group is activated.

Page 23: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Function and structure of Respiratory Membrane

Page 24: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Respiratory Membrane

●The respiratory membrane is absorbent tissue where gases are exchanged between alveolar air and the blood

Page 25: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

4 Layers of the Respiratory Membrane

● Alveolar epithelial wall● Alveolar epithelial basment membrane● Capillary basement membrane● Endothelial cells of capillaries

Page 26: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Air and blood gas exchange

Page 27: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Gas Exchange● Blood that is low in

oxygen is pumped from the right side of the heart, through pulmonary veins

● External respiration– Carbon dioxide fuses

from the Pulmonary Capillaries into the alveoli, oxygen diffuses from the alveoli into the pulmonary capillaries

Page 28: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Internal Respiration● Internal Respiration

– Oxygen-rich blood is pumped through the systemic circuit to tissues throughout the body.

– Internal respiration occurs within tissues, as oxygen diffuses from the systemic capillaries into the cells, and carbon dioxide diffuses from the cell and into the systemic circuit.

Page 29: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

External Respiration

● Each breath draws down through the bronchi and bronchioles into the alveoli. Here, in the air sacs, occurs the central process of external respiration.

Page 30: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Oxygen & Carbon dioxide transportation

Page 31: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

How Oxygen diffuses● Usually, air is about 78% Nitrogen, 21%

oxygen, and 0.04% Carbon DioxideWhen air is inhaled, the gas molecules are

filtered through, come into the Alveoli, and dissolve into the blood stream and diffuse with the stream in areas of differentiating pressure.

98% of oxygen binds to the Iron in Hemoglobin, and is pumped through the body by the heart. The other 2% of Oxygen dissolves into the plasma

Page 32: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Oxygen Increase● Oxygen is released faster over time as the Carbon

Dioxide concentration increases, the environment becomes more acidic, or as blood temperature increases. This is why you breathe harder to bring in more oxygen when exercising

Blood flow picks up Carbon Dioxide and transported in three different forms.

Some dissolves into plasma, some attach to Hemoglobin and makes its way back out to the lungs, and the third becomes Bicarbonate ions.

CO2 bonds to the amino acids in Hemoglobin, and can be carried out on Hemoglobin with Oxygen already on it.

Page 33: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Bicarbonate Ions● The Bicarbonate ions are when CO2

react with H2O to create a carbonic acid, then results in the ions. This then travels out with the blood stream, through capillaries of the lungs, dissolves in the alveoli, and exhaled.

Page 34: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Rate of Diffusion depends on● Partial pressure difference● Large surface area of alveoli● Diffusion distance (Membrane thickness)

Page 35: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Factors that affect breathing

Page 36: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Factors that affect breathingAsthma: Narrowed airways caused by an allergic reaction (i.e Dust, Pollen, Smoke). Infections or a large amount of physical activity can cause an attack.Whooping Cough:

Attacks the Bronchi, inflame lung tissues, and create thick fluid to weaken breathing.

Page 37: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

Factors that affect breathingTuberculosis: Bacterial

infection of the lung cavities, and potentially fatal.

Bronchitis: Inflammation of Bronchi and coughing of yellow mucosa fluid.

Pneumonia: Inflammation of lungs from infection. Parts of lungs fill with fluid and become airless.

Page 38: The Respiratory System.  Presented by Toni Davis and Niamh McDonald

The End● You have five to ten minutes to study before

taking the quiz.