Title: Chapter 24 The Respiratory System
1Chapter 24The Respiratory System
- Cells continually use O2 release CO2
- Respiratory system designed for gas exchange
- Cardiovascular system transports gases in blood
- Failure of either system
- rapid cell death from O2 starvation
2Respiratory System Anatomy
- Nose
- Pharynx throat
- Larynx voicebox
- Trachea windpipe
- Bronchi airways
- Lungs
- Locations of infections
- upper respiratory tract is above vocal cords
- lower respiratory tract is below vocal cords
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4External Nasal Structures
- Skin, nasal bones, cartilage lined with mucous
membrane - Openings called external nares or nostrils
5Nose -- Internal Structures
- Large chamber within the skull
- Roof is made up of ethmoid and floor is hard
palate - Internal nares (choanae) are openings to pharynx
- Nasal septum is composed of bone cartilage
- Bony swelling or conchae on lateral walls
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7Functions of the Nasal Structures
- Olfactory epithelium for sense of smell
- Pseudostratified ciliated columnar with goblet
cells lines nasal cavity - warms air due to high vascularity
- mucous moistens air traps dust
- cilia move mucous towards pharynx
- Paranasal sinuses open into nasal cavity
- found in ethmoid, sphenoid, frontal maxillary
- lighten skull resonate voice
8Pharynx
- Muscular tube (5 inch long) hanging from skull
- skeletal muscle mucous membrane
- Extends from internal nares to cricoid cartilage
- Functions
- passageway for food and air
- resonating chamber for speech production
- tonsil (lymphatic tissue) in the walls protects
entryway into body - Distinct regions -- nasopharynx, oropharynx and
laryngopharynx
9Nasopharynx
- From choanae to soft palate
- openings of auditory (Eustachian) tubes from
middle ear cavity - adenoids or pharyngeal tonsil in roof
- Passageway for air only
- pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium
with goblet
10Oropharynx
- From soft palate to epiglottis
- fauces is opening from mouth into oropharynx
- palatine tonsils found in side walls, lingual
tonsil in tongue - Common passageway for food air
- stratified squamous epithelium
11Laryngopharynx
- Extends from epiglottis to cricoid cartilage
- Common passageway for food air ends as
esophagus inferiorly - stratified squamous epithelium
12Cartilages of the Larynx
- Thyroid cartilage forms Adams apple
- Epiglottis---leaf-shaped piece of elastic
cartilage - during swallowing, larynx moves upward
- epiglottis bends to cover glottis
- Cricoid cartilage---ring of cartilage attached to
top of trachea - Pair of arytenoid cartilages sit upon cricoid
- many muscles responsible for their movement
- partially buried in vocal folds (true vocal cords)
13Larynx
- Cartilage connective tissue tube
- Anterior to C4 to C6
- Constructed of 3 single 3 paired cartilages
14Vocal Cords
- False vocal cords (ventricular folds) found above
vocal folds (true vocal cords) - True vocal cords attach to arytenoid cartilages
15 The Structures of Voice Production
- True vocal cord contains both skeletal muscle and
an elastic ligament (vocal ligament) - When 10 intrinsic muscles of the larynx contract,
move cartilages stretch vocal cord tight - When air is pushed past tight ligament, sound is
produced (the longer thicker vocal cord in male
produces a lower pitch of sound) - The tighter the ligament, the higher the pitch
- To increase volume of sound, push air harder
16Movement of Vocal Cords
- Opening and closing of the vocal folds occurs
during breathing and speech
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18Trachea
- Size is 5 in long 1in diameter
- Extends from larynx to T5 anterior to the
esophagus and then splits into bronchi - Layers
- mucosa pseudostratified columnar with cilia
goblet - submucosa loose connective tissue seromucous
glands - hyaline cartilage 16 to 20 incomplete rings
- open side facing esophagus contains trachealis m.
(smooth) - internal ridge on last ring called carina
- adventitia binds it to other organs
19Trachea and Bronchial Tree
- Full extent of airways is visible starting at the
larynx and trachea
20Histology of the Trachea
- Ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium
- Hyaline cartilage as C-shaped structure closed by
trachealis muscle
21Airway Epithelium
- Ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium
with goblet cells produce a moving mass of mucus.
22Tracheostomy and Intubation
- Reestablishing airflow past an airway obstruction
- crushing injury to larynx or chest
- swelling that closes airway
- vomit or foreign object
- Tracheostomy is incision in trachea below cricoid
cartilage if larynx is obstructed - Intubation is passing a tube from mouth or nose
through larynx and trachea
23Bronchi and Bronchioles
- Primary bronchi supply each lung
- Secondary bronchi supply each lobe of the lungs
(3 right 2 left) - Tertiary bronchi supply each bronchopulmonary
segment - Repeated branchings called bronchioles form a
bronchial tree
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25Histology of Bronchial Tree
- Epithelium changes from pseudostratified ciliated
columnar to nonciliated simple cuboidal as pass
deeper into lungs - Incomplete rings of cartilage replaced by rings
of smooth muscle then connective tissue - sympathetic NS adrenal gland release
epinephrine that relaxes smooth muscle dilates
airways - asthma attack or allergic reactions constrict
distal bronchiole smooth muscle - nebulization therapy inhale mist with chemicals
that relax muscle reduce thickness of mucus
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27Pleural Membranes Pleural Cavity
- Visceral pleura covers lungs --- parietal pleura
lines ribcage covers upper surface of diaphragm - Pleural cavity is potential space between ribs
lungs
28Gross Anatomy of Lungs
- Base, apex (cupula), costal surface, cardiac
notch - Oblique horizontal fissure in right lung
results in 3 lobes - Oblique fissure only in left lung produces 2 lobes
29Mediastinal Surface of Lungs
- Blood vessels airways enter lungs at hilus
- Forms root of lungs
- Covered with pleura (parietal becomes visceral)
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32Structures within a Lobule of Lung
- Branchings of single arteriole, venule
bronchiole are wrapped by elastic CT - Respiratory bronchiole
- simple squamous
- Alveolar ducts surrounded by alveolar sacs
alveoli - sac is 2 or more alveoli sharing a common opening
33Histology of Lung Tissue
Photomicrograph of lung tissue showing
bronchioles, alveoli and alveolar ducts.
34Cells Types of the Alveoli
- Type I alveolar cells
- simple squamous cells where gas exchange occurs
- Type II alveolar cells (septal cells)
- free surface has microvilli
- secrete alveolar fluid containing surfactant
- Alveolar dust cells
- wandering macrophages remove debris
35Alveolar-Capillary Membrane
- Respiratory membrane 1/2 micron thick
- Exchange of gas from alveoli to blood
- 4 Layers of membrane to cross
- alveolar epithelial wall of type I cells
- alveolar epithelial basement membrane
- capillary basement membrane
- endothelial cells of capillary
- Vast surface area handball court
36Details of Respiratory Membrane
- Find the 4 layers that comprise the respiratory
membrane
37Double Blood Supply to the Lungs
- Deoxygenated blood arrives through pulmonary
trunk from the right ventricle - Bronchial arteries branch off of the aorta to
supply oxygenated blood to lung tissue - Venous drainage returns all blood to heart
- Less pressure in venous system
- Pulmonary blood vessels constrict in response to
low O2 levels so as not to pick up CO2 on there
way through the lungs
38Breathing or Pulmonary Ventilation
- Air moves into lungs when pressure inside lungs
is less than atmospheric pressure - How is this accomplished?
- Air moves out of the lungs when pressure inside
lungs is greater than atmospheric pressure - How is this accomplished?
- Atmospheric pressure 1 atm or 760mm Hg
39Boyles Law
- As the size of closed container decreases,
pressure inside is increased - The molecules have less wall area to strike so
the pressure on each inch of area increases.
40Dimensions of the Chest Cavity
- Breathing in requires muscular activity chest
size changes - Contraction of the diaphragm flattens the dome
and increases the vertical dimension of the chest
41Quiet Inspiration
- Diaphragm moves 1 cm ribs lifted by muscles
- Intrathoracic pressure falls and 2-3 liters
inhaled
42Quiet Expiration
- Passive process with no muscle action
- Elastic recoil surface tension in alveoli pulls
inward - Alveolar pressure increases air is pushed out
43Labored Breathing
- Forced expiration
- abdominal mm force diaphragm up
- internal intercostals depress ribs
- Forced inspiration
- sternocleidomastoid, scalenes pectoralis minor
lift chest upwards as you gasp for air
44IntrathoracicPressures
- Always subatmospheric (756 mm Hg)
- As diaphragm contracts intrathoracic pressure
decreases even more (754 mm Hg) - Helps keep parietal visceral pleura stick
together
45Summary of Breathing
- Alveolar pressure decreases air rushes in
- Alveolar pressure increases air rushes out
46Airway Resistance
- Resistance to airflow depends upon airway size
- increase size of chest
- airways increase in diameter
- contract smooth muscles in airways
- decreases in diameter
47Breathing Patterns
- Eupnea normal quiet breathing
- Apnea temporary cessation of breathing
- Dyspnea difficult or labored breathing
- Tachypnea rapid breathing
- Diaphragmatic breathing descent of diaphragm
causes stomach to bulge during inspiration - Costal breathing just rib activity involved
48External Respiration
- Gases diffuse from areas of high partial pressure
to areas of low partial pressure - Exchange of gas between air blood
- Deoxygenated blood becomes saturated
- Compare gas movements in pulmonary capillaries to
tissue capillaries
49Internal Respiration
- Exchange of gases between blood tissues
- Conversion of oxygenated blood into deoxygenated
- Observe diffusion of O2 inward
- at rest 25 of available O2 enters cells
- during exercise more O2 is absorbed
- Observe diffusion of CO2 outward
50Summary of Gas Exchange Transport
51Role of the Respiratory Center
- Respiratory mm. controlled by neurons in pons
medulla - 3 groups of neurons
- medullary rhythmicity
- pneumotaxic
- apneustic centers
52Location of the peripheral chemoreceptors
53Pneumotaxic Apneustic Areas
- Pneumotaxic Area
- constant inhibitory impulses to inspiratory area
- neurons trying to turn off inspiration before
lungs too expanded - Apneustic Area
- stimulatory signals to inspiratory area to
prolong inspiration - if pneumotaxic area is sick
54Regulation of Respiratory Center
- Cortical Influences
- voluntarily alter breathing patterns
- limitations are buildup of CO2 H in blood
- inspiratory center is stimulated by increase in
either - if you hold breathe until you faint----breathing
will resume
55Chemical Regulation of Respiration
- Central chemoreceptors in medulla
- respond to changes in H or pCO2
- hypercapnia slight increase in pCO2 is noticed
- Peripheral chemoreceptors
- respond to changes in H , pO2 or PCO2
- aortic body---in wall of aorta
- nerves join vagus
- carotid bodies--in walls of common carotid
arteries - nerves join glossopharyngeal nerve