Chapter 37 Respiratory System - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Chapter 37 Respiratory System

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Title: Chapter 37 Respiratory System


1
Chapter 37 Respiratory System
2
Respiratory System (Breathing)
(Cellular) Respiration Breathing
Chemical Process Food is oxidized by enzymes converted to ATP (most ATP from mitochondria) Mechanical or Physical Exchange of O2 CO2 (inhalation and exhalation)
Cellular Process Occurs in every cell of the body 2. Usually occurs in Specialized Organs/ body surface (In simpler organisms thru skin/ cell membrane)
3
Respiration vs Breathing
4
Variations in Breathing Structures (represents
evolutionary trends)
  • Cell membrane? in unicellular organisms
  • Ex Cnidaria, Porifera
  • 2. Moist skin? mucus secreting cells maintain
    moisture
  • Ex Worm phyla
  • Tracheae? air enters spiracles (opening along
    abdomen) which leads into tracheal tubes to small
    air sacs surrounded by body fluid w/in sinus
  • Ex Insects (grasshopper)

5
  • 4. Gills? thin filamentous structures composed of
    capillaries and flat squamous epithelial cells
  • Ex Fishes, immature amphibians, crayfish, skin
    gills on starfish, mollusks (clam)

6
Cont. Variations in Breathing Structures
  • Oops!!! Forgot this slide!
  • 5. Lungs? mature amphibian, reptiles, birds,
    mammals (possess diaphragm)
  • () skin
  • 6. Stoma? Opening on underside of leaf- gas
    exchange
  • 7. Lenticels? openings in stem when leaf drops
  • (Roots possess root hairs- gases diffuse across
    into root)

7
Breathing Organs Overview
  1. Earthworm? moist skin
  2. Starfish? skin gills
  3. Clams? gills (squid)
  4. Grasshopper? tracheae
  5. Crayfish? gills
  6. Perch? gills
  7. Human? lungs

8
Human Respiratory System
  • Nasal Cavity? ciliated columnar epithelium-
    secrete mucus
  • Pharynx? back of throat
  • Epiglottis? flap of tissue over glottis
  • Glottis? opening to trachea
  • Larynx? voice box
  • Trachea? windpipe
  • Left and right bronchus(i)? bronchial tubes that
    leads to bronchioles
  • Bronchiole? smaller branches w/in lungs
  • Alveolus (i)? microscopic air sac
  • Capillary bed around alveoli? site of gas
    exchange (oxyhemoglobin H6 4O2 H6O)
  • 11. Venules? small veins
  • 12. Pulmonary veins to left atrium- part of the
    pulmonary circuit of the circ system
  • 13. Pulmonary artery to lungs (fr right ventricle)

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12
Breathing Muscles
  • Diaphragm? sheet of voluntary muscle found
    between the thoracic and abdominal cavities in
    mammals
  • Intercostal (rib muscles)? muscles b/t rib bones
    (internal external layers)

13
Breathing Mechanism
  • Inhalation- intake of air due to contraction of
  • 1. Diaphragm- when diaphragm contracts it
    straightens
  • 2. External intercostal- when contracted these
    muscles lift rib cage up and out
  • 3. Thoracic cavity enlarges air rushes into
    inflate lungs (Intrathoracic pressure low- low
    pressure on lungs)
  • - Result Inhalation occurs
  • Exhalation
  • 1. Muscles relax, volume decreases, pressure
    increases and exhalation occurs

14
Negative Pressure Breathing
15
Nerves Controlling Breathing (Medulla)
  • Phrenic Nerve
  • Motor nerve from medulla which causes contraction
    of diaphragm and intercostal muscles
  • Motor nerves? transmit impulses AWAY from CNS
    to effectors
  • RESULT Inhalation
  • 2. Vagus Nerve
  • Mixed nerve (both sensory motor) sensory fibers
    transmit impulses to brain indicating that
    diaphragm intercostals muscles are contracted
  • - Signals inhibits further stimulation by
    phrenic nerve
  • RESULT Exhalation

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17
  • 3. BLOOD pH 7.4
  • - CO2 conc of blood is the factor which
    regulates breathing rate (blood pH)
  • CO2 H2O ? ? ? H2CO3 ? H
    HCO3-
  • RBC (lungs) carbonic anhydrase
    carbonic acid (plasma 90)
  • Carbonic Anhydrase? enzyme in RBC which converts
    CO2 H2O to H2CO3 H (also reverses this rxn
    at the lungs)
  • - Lowers blood pH (below 7.4)? stimulates
    medulla to increase breathing rate via phrenic
    nerves

18
  • 4. Hyperventilation
  • Rapid breathing (over breathing- inhaling too
    much O2) reduces the CO2 levels in the blood
  • Less CO2 causes dilation of arteries blood
    pressure lowers (carotid arteries to the brain)
    brain receives less blood? dizzy, light-headed,
    weak (vasoconstriction)

19
  • CO2 Transfer from Body Tissues to Blood and
    Lungs
  • CO2 leaves cells and enters tissue spaces
  • CO2 enter capillaries
  • CO2 reacts with H2O (RBC) ? H2CO3
  • H2CO3 ? dissociates into H and HCO3-
    (bicarbonate ion)
  • HCO3- leave RBC and enter plasma
  • Blood travels to lungs and enters lung
    capillaries
  • HCO3- reenters RBC
  • HCO3- H ? H2CO3
  • H2CO3 carbonic anhydrase (enzyme)? H2O CO2
  • W/in RBC, CO2 enters plasma
  • CO2 leaves lung capillary and enters alveolar
    space (resultCO2 exits out of mouth)

20
  • O2 Transfer from Blood to Body Tissues
  • RBC enters lung capillary
  • O2 from alveolar space enters lung capillary
    plasma
  • O2 enters RBC from plasma combines with
    hemoglobin (Hb) oxyhemoglobin
  • RBC carry oxyhemoglobin out of lung to body
    tissues
  • O2 laden RBC enter tissue capillary
  • Oxyhemoglobin breaks down, releasing O2 into
    plasma
  • O2 leaves plasma and enters tissue space
  • O2 enters tissue cells from tissue space
  • RBC returns to lungs via circulatory system

21
  • CO2 conc in metabolically active cells is much
    greater than in capillaries, so CO2 diffuses from
    the cells into the capillaries
  • 7 of the CO2 directly dissolves in the
    plasma
  • 23 binds to the amino groups in hemoglobin
  • 70 is transported in the blood as bicarbonate
    ion
  • - H2O in the blood combines with CO2 to form
    bicarbonate ions (via carbonic anhydrase)
  • - This removes the CO2 from the blood so
    diffusion of even more CO2 from the cells into
    the capillaries continues yet still manages to
    "package" the CO2 for eventual passage out of the
    body

22
- In the alveoli capillaries, bicarbonate
combines with a hydrogen ion (proton) to form
carbonic acid, which breaks down into carbon
dioxide and water (via carbonic anhydrase) - CO2
then diffuses into the alveoli and out of the
body with the next exhalation
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