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The Respiratory System

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Chapter 23 The Respiratory System Conducting division Respiratory division Respiratory system Functions to allow the exchange of O2 rich air from the atmosphere with ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Respiratory System


1
Chapter 23
  • The Respiratory System
  • Conducting division
  • Respiratory division

2
Respiratory system
  • Functions to allow the exchange of O2 rich air
    from the atmosphere with the O2 poor air in lungs
    and the blowing off of CO2 in the process.
  • Broken down into 2 zones
  • Conducting zone structures nose, nasal cavity,
    pharynx, larynx, trachea and bronchioles.
  • Respiratory zone structures alveolar ducts,
    alveoli and alveolar sacs where gaseous exchange
    occurs across the capillary endothelium.
  • Upper respiratory tract extends from nares
    through the larynx.
  • Lower respiratory tract extends from larynx to
    alveolar sacs.

3
Respiratory System
  • Defined Includes the nose, nasal cavity,
    pharynx, larynx, trachea and lungs.

4
  • Respiratoy tree showing extensive branching

5
Conducting division
  • These structures serve for the exchange of air
    only (i.e. ventilation).
  • No respiration occurs until the air reaches the
    respiratory structures (i.e. terminal brochioles,
    alveoli, etc.) in the respiratory zone.

6
Nose and external nares
  • External nose covered by skin, it is the only
    part of the respiratory system exposed to the
    outside.
  • External nares (nostrils) are openings from the
    outside into upper respiratory tract.
  • Nasal cavity a) warms air b) moistens air, and
    c) filters out large particulates before they
    reach the pharynx.
  • Also serves for olfaction and as a resonating
    chamber for voice

7
Nose

8
The Pharynx Throat
  • Defined posterior part of nasal cavity and oral
    cavity
  • Consists of 3 divisions
  • nasopharynx - posterior nasal cavity, past
    internal nares air passage way from nasal cavity
    to oropharynx
  • oropharynx passageway for air and food extends
    from soft palate down to epiglottis
  • laryngopharynx passageway for air only, extends
    from epiglottis to larynx

9
Nasal and oropharynx

10
The Larynx the voice box
  • a.- opening into trachea from laryngopharynx
  • b.- diverts air and food in correct directions
  • c.- houses vocal cords
  • 9 cartilages total (you are responsible for
    knowing the 4 below)
  • Thyroid cartilage Adams apple
  • Cricoid cartilage completely encircles upper
    trachea
  • Arytenoid cartilage
  • Epiglottis made of elastic cartilage acts as a
    flap valve to close glottis during swallowing.

11
The Larynx voice box
  • 1. thyroid cartilage Adams apple made of
    hyaline cartilage.
  • - largest of the laryngeal cartilages
  • 2. cricoid cartilage hyaline cartilage
  • - inferior to thyroid cartilage.
  • 3. arytenoid cartilage hyaline cartilage
  • - true vocal cords are attached to these
    and they rotate laterally to tighten vocal
    cords for speech.
  • 4. epiglottis made of elastic cartilage
  • - hood over glottic opening and deflects food
    and liquids away from glottis.
  • Glottis is the opening into the trachea.

12
Larynx voice box

13
vocal folds/true vocal cords


14
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15
The Trachea windpipe
  • Cartilaginous tube going from larynx to hilus of
    lungs.
  • basic tissue structure
  • mucosa lined with pseudostratified ciliated
    columnar epithelium- cilia are part of
    mucociliary escalator mechanism.
  • Submucos - contains goblet mucous glands
  • Tracheal cartilage 16-20 C shaped rings of
    hyaline cartilage.
  • adventitia fibrous CT attached to perichondrium
    of rings.
  • trachealis muscle joins end of Crings on
    posterior opening
  • Bifurcates at carina into left and right
    primary bronchus.

16
The Trachea windpipe

17
  • Cilia and goblets cells with microvilli in trachea

18
Bronchial tree

19

20
Conducting division
  • R/L Primary Bronchi right mainstem bronchus
    comes off 1st and is more vertical, as a result
    foreign objects getting into trachea are more
    likely to enter right mainstem bronchus.
  • Secondary Bronchi lobar bronchi
  • - right side three secondary bronchii
  • -left side two secondary bronchi
  • Tertiary Bronchi segmental bronchi
  • -divide repeatedly into smaller and smaller
    bronchi
  • Bronchioles air passages lt 1 mm in diameter
  • Terminal Bronchioles air passages lt .5 mm in
    diameter

21
Respiratory division
  • Is found only in the lungs beginning at terminal
    bronchioles
  • Includes terminal bronchioles, alveolar ducts,
    alveoli and alveolar sacs where gaseous exchange
    occurs across the capillary endothelium.
  • Allows the exchange of respiratory gases (O2
    CO2) from alveolar space into blood and to be
    bound to Hgb in RBCs

22
The LUNGS

23
Respiratory division
  • defined by the presence of alveoli
  • respiratory bronchioles give rise to alveolar
    ducts
  • alveolar ducts walls consist of rings of smooth
    muscle
  • alveolar sacs terminal clusters of alveoli
  • alveoli 300 million and account for greatest
    protion of lung volume and a large surface area
    for air exchange

24
Respiratory division

25
Respiratory division anatomy

26
Alveolar sac cell types
  • type I cells alveolar cells squamous cells
    that cover 95 of alveolar surface where gas
    exchange occurs.
  • type II cells alveolar septal cells comprise
    other 5 of alveolar cells and produce
    surfactant that keeps alveoli from collapsing
    and sticking together.
  • alveolar macrophages dust cells most numerous
    of alveolar cells. Housekeepers of the alveoli.

27
Alveolar sac anatomy

28
Pleural membranes
  • Serous Membranes similar to pericardium and
    consists of
  • visceral pleura closely adhered to lung tissue
    proper.
  • parietal pleura lines the thoracic cavity.
  • pleural fluid/space clear plasma ultrafiltrate
    that fills pleural cavity and reduces friction
    when lungs inflate and deflate.

29
Lung anatomy
  • Occupy greatest portion of thoracic cavity. Weigh
    0.6 s
  • Left lung- 2 lobes
  • Right lung- 3 lobes
  • Lobes made up of lobules, which are smallest
    division of lungs.
  • Bronchi and vessels enter lungs at hilus.
  • Base rests on diaphragm
  • Apex is top of lung
  • Lung tissue is primarily of elastic connective
    tissue.
  • Blood supply to lung tissue is via bronchial
    vessels off of aorta.

30
Bronchopulmonary segments

31
Muscles involved in breathing
  • Most important muscle is diaphragm and it
    descends as we inhale.
  • Next most important are the external and internal
    intercostal muscles which help to elevate the
    ribs in a bucket handle motion.
  • Accessory muscles include Inhalation- serratus
    anterior, sternocleidomastoid, scalenes
    pectoralis minor.
  • Exhalation- rectus abdominis, external obliques,
    transversus thoracis

32
Muscles involved in breathing

33
Thoracic cavity changes

34
Neural control of respiration
  • Normal breathing occurs automatically but are
    regulated by 3 reflex mechanisms.
    Mechanoreceptors (vol and abp), chemoreceptors
    (pH, pCO2, pO2) and Protective reflexes (injury
    or irritants to respiratory tract)
  • Three pairs of regulatory centers exist in the
    reticular formation of the pons and medulla.
  • The respiratory rhythmicity center regulates rate
    and depth
  • The apneustic center causes strong sustained
    inspiration
  • The pneumotaxic center inhibits the apneustic
    center stopping inspiration
  • The latter two centers modify the pace and rhythm
    of respiration based on information from higher
    centers (cortex, limbic system and hypothlamus)

35
Neural control of respiration
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