Title: Respiratory System Pt. II
1Respiratory System Pt. II
- Thomas Ackerman
- Juyoung Jang
- Liezel Riego
2Quick Review
- 6.4.1 Distinguish between ventilation, gas
exchange, and cell respiration. - 6.4.2 Explain the need for a ventilation system.
- 6.4.3 Describe the features of the alveoli that
adapt them to gas exchange. - 6.4.4 Draw and label a diagram of the
ventilation system, including trachea, lungs,
bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli.
3Functions of respiratory system
- Providing an area for gas exchange between air
and circulating blood - Moving air to and from exchange surfaces
- Protecting respiratory surfaces from
environmental variations
4Organization of the respiratory system
- Includes the nose, nasal cavity, pharynx, larynx,
trachea, bronchi, bronchioles, and alveoli - Respiratory tract carries air to and from
alveoli - Upper respiratory tract filters and humidifies
incoming air - Lower respiratory tract gas exchange
56.4.5 Mechanisms of Ventilation
- To inhale, the diaphragm contracts and flattens
and the external intercoastal muscles also
contract and cause the ribcage to expand and move
up. - The diaphragm contracts drops downwards. Thoracic
volume increases, lungs expand, and the pressure
inside the lungs decreases, so that air flows
into the lungs in response to the pressure
gradient. - These movements cause the chest cavity to become
larger and the pressure to be smaller, so air
rushes in from the atmosphere to the lungs. - To exhale, the diaphragm relaxes and moves up. In
quiet breathing, the external intercoastal
muscles relax causing the elasticity of the lung
tissue to recoil. - In forced breathing, the internal inercoastal
muscles and abdominal muscles also contract to
increase the force of the expiration. - Thoracic volume decreases and the pressure inside
the lungs increases. Air flows passively out of
the lungs in response to the pressure gradient.
The ribs to move downward and backward causing
the chest cavity to become smaller in volume and
the pressure increases pushing air out of the
lungs into the atmosphere. (From AP Edition
Biology)
6Gas exchange occurs across specialized
respiratory surfaces
- Respiratory Medium source of O2
- Air or and water
- Respiratory Surface where gases are exchanged
with the surrounding environment - Animals move O2 and CO2 by passive transport
(diffusion-higher concentration to lower
concentration) - Rate of diffusion is proportional to the surface
area where diffusion occurs and inversely
proportional to the square of the distance of
movement - Thin and large surface area, maximize gas exchange
7Mammalian respiration
- Negative pressure breathing pulling air instead
of pushing it out into the lungs. - Lung volume increases as rib muscles and
diaphragm contract - Tidal volume Volume of air inhalation
- Vital capacity Max t.v. in forced breathing
- Residual volume amount of air remaining after
forced breathing
8Other Animals (NOT mammals)
- Fish
- Gills outfoldings of body surface extended in
water - Helps ventilation process increasing flow of
respiratory medium over the respiratory surface - Countercurrent exchange makes it possible to
transfer O2 to the blood in water - Results in diffusion gradient for O2 over entire
length of capillaries in gills - As blood moves through gill capillaries, loaded
with O2, even through against concentration
gradient - More than 80 in O2 in water is able to be
diffused - Insects
- Tracheal system air tubes branching through body
- Folded internal respiratory surface
- Trachae opens outside
- Open circulatory system
9Other Animals (NOT mammals)
- Birds
- 8 or 9 airsacs and lungs
- Bellows keeping air flowing
- Not to be confused with alveolar sacs
- Amphibians
- Positive pressure breathing air is forced
through lungs - During cycle, muscles lower in oral cavity,
drawing air through nostrils - Closed nostrils and mouth, floor of oral cavity
rises - Air is forced down trachea
- Elastic recoil of lungs and compression of
muscular body wall force air back out of the lungs
10Marine Mammals
- What happens when respiratory medium is not
accessible continuously? - Weddell seal (and other diving mammals)
- Ability to store large amounts of O2
- Twice as much per kg of body mass as humans
- 5 in lungs, 70 in blood
- Twice as much blood volume per kg of body mass as
humans - Huge spleen
- Stores 24L of blood
- High concentration of myoglobin (oxygen-storing
protein) in muscles - 25 of O2 in muscle, 13 in humans
- Swim with little muscular effort, buoyancy
- Heart rate and O2 consumption rate decrease while
diving - Blood supply to most muscles either restricted or
shut down completely
11Breathing ventilates the lungs
- Control of breathing
- Breathing control centers medulla oblongata and
pons. - Pons sets basic breathing rhythm.
- Sensors in aorta and carotid arteries monitor O2
and CO2 concentrations - Negative-feedback mechanism prevents lungs from
over-expanding. - Medulla regulates breathing activity in response
to pH changes of tissue fluid (cerebrospinal). - CO2 diffuses from blood to fluid, reacts with
water and carbonic acid, lowering pH - Increases depth and rate of breathing
- Excess CO2 released through exhalation
- This happens during exercise
- O2 concentrations have little effect
- When O2 is extremely depressed (high altitudes),
O2 sensors in aorta and carotid arteries in neck
send signals to breathing control centers - Increases breathing rate
- Normally, rise in CO2 concentration accompanies
fall in O2 concentration
12Control of breathing (Cont.)
- Hyperventilation tricking the breathing center
- Excessive, deep, rapid breathing purges blood of
too much CO2 - Breathing center temporarily stops sending
impulses to rib muscles and diaphragm - Breathing stops until CO2 levels increase (or O2
levels decrease) enough so that the breathing
center turns back on
13Respiratory pigments bind and transport gases
- Oxygen has low solubility in water and in blood
- Respiratory pigments transport gases and help
buffer the blood - Greatly increase the amount of O2 the blood can
carry - Hemoglobin - An iron containing protein in
red-blood cell that reversibly binds oxygen
(reversibly just means loading oxygen in the
lungs and unloading it in the rest of the body) - Four protein subunits with iron in the middle of
each subunit - Each hemoglobin can bind to four molecules of O2
- Binding of O2 to once subunit causes the other
three to change their shape slightly
14The Bohr Shift
- An effect that releases oxygen by hemoglobin
- Lowers the affinity for oxygen because of drop in
pH and an increase in partial pressure - This causes the hemoglobin to release more oxygen
which can be used for cellular respiration
15Carbon Dioxide Transport
- Other Functions for Hemoglobin
- Helps transport CO2
- Assists in buffering- prevents harmful changes in
blood pH - Process of Transportation
- CO2 diffuses into red blood cells (90) and
plasma(7) - Some CO2 is picked up by hemoglobin but most
react in water forming carbonic acid (H2CO3) - Carbonic acid dissociates into a Hydrogen ion
(H) and bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) - Hemoglobin binds most of the H preventing it
from acidifying the blood and starting the Bohr
Shift
16Carbon Dioxide Transport (Cont.)
- The carbonic acid (H2CO3) diffuses into the
plasma - Blood flows through the lungs so the whole
process is rapidly reversed - Diffusion of CO2 out of the blood shifts the
chemical equilibrium in favor of the conversion
of bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) to CO2 - Bicarbonate ion (HCO3-) diffuses from plasma into
the red blood cells - This then combines with a hydrogen ion (H) to
form (H2CO3) , a carbonic acid - Carbonic acid is converted back to CO2 and water
- CO2 is then unloaded into the alveolar space
which then will be expelled during exhalation
17Pressure and Ventilation
- The direction of airflow is determined by the
relation of atmospheric pressure and
intrapulmonary pressure - Intrapulmonary pressure is the pressure inside
the alveoli - Respiratory pressure
- Low when you are relaxed and breathing quietly
- Drops when you inhale
- Increases when you exhale
- Atmospheric pressure decreases with increasing
altitude and so do the partial pressure of gases
including oxygen - Partial pressure measure of the concentration of
one gas in a mixture of gases pressure exerted
by particular gas in a mixture of gases (pressure
exerted by oxygen in air)
18Gas exchange at High Altitude (HL)
- Partial air pressure of oxygen at high altitude
is lower than at sea level - Effects
- Hemoglobin may not become fully saturated as it
passes through the lungs - tissues of the body may not be adequately
supplied with oxygen - Mountain Sickness
- with muscular weakness, rapid pulse, nausea and
headaches - can be avoided by ascending gradually to allow
the body to acclimatize to high altitude
19Gas exchange at High Altitude (Cont.)
- During acclimatization the ventilation rate
increases - Extra red blood cells are produced, increasing
the hemoglobin content of the blood - Muscles produce more myoglobin and develop a
denser capillary network - These changes help to supply the body with enough
oxygen - Some people who are native to high altitude show
other adaptations - a high lung capacity with a large surface area
for gas exchange - larger tidal volumes and hemoglobin with an
increased affinity for oxygen
20Changes in the respiratory system
- At birth
- Before delivery, fetal lungs are fluid-filled and
collapsed. - At first breath, lungs inflate and never collapse
completely thereafter. - Aging
- Less efficient in elderly
- Elastic tissue deteriorates, lowering the vital
capacity of the lungs. - Movements of the chest are restricted by
arthritic changes and decreased flexibility of
costal cartilages. - Some degree of emphysema is generally present.
21Asthma
- Chronic long term lung disease that inflames and
narrows airways - The muscles around the bronchi tighten which
causes less air to flow to your lungs - Causes-pollen, pets, dust mites, fungi etc.
- Being too clean causes the immune system to
react against harmless substances
22Study Questions
- Why is the position of lung tissues within the
body an advantage for terrestrial animals? - Explain how countercurrent exchange maximizes the
ability of fish gills to extract dissolved O2
from water - How does an increase in the CO2 concentration in
the blood affect the pH of cerebrospinal fluid? - A slight decrease in blood pH causes the hearts
pacemaker to speed up. What is the function of
this control mechanism? - How does breathing differ in mammals and birds?
- What determines whether O2 or CO2 diffuse into or
out of the capillaries in the tissues and near
the alveolar spaces? Explain. - How does the Bohr shift help deliver O2 to very
active tissues? - Carbon dioxide within red blood cells in the
tissue capillaries combines with water, forming
carbonic acid. What causes the reverse of this
reaction in red blood cells in capillaries near
the alveolar spaces? - Describe three (3) adaptations that enable
Weddell seals to stay underwater much longer than
humans can.
23Suggested Answers
- If lungs extended into environment, dry out,
diffusion would stop - Results in diffusion gradient for O2 over entire
length of capillaries in gills, opposite flow
allows for O2 loading, despite against concent.
grad. - gt CO2 lt pH
- Increases heart rate increases rate at which CO2
is delivered to lungs, where CO2 is removed. - Air passes through lungs in one direction in
birds direction reverses in mammals between
inhalation and exhalation. - Differences in partial pressure gases diffuse
highergtlower partial press. - Causes hemoglobin to release more O2 at lower pH,
in vicinity of tissues w/ high resp. rates and
CO2 release. - Decrease in CO2 concent. in plasma as it diffuses
into alveolar spaces causes carbonic acid within
RBC to break down, yielding CO2, diffuses into
plasma - Blood volume relative to body mass larger
spleen more myoglobin in muscles heart rate and
metabolic rate decrease during dives