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Respiratory System

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Anatomy of the Respiratory System Pulmonary Ventilation Gas Exchange and Transport Respiratory Disorders 22-* – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Respiratory System


1
Respiratory System
  • Anatomy of the Respiratory System
  • Pulmonary Ventilation
  • Gas Exchange and Transport
  • Respiratory Disorders

2
Organs of Respiratory System
  • Nose
  • Pharynx
  • Larynx
  • Trachea
  • Bronchi
  • Lungs

3
General Aspects
  • Airflow in lungs
  • bronchi ? bronchioles ? alveoli
  • Conducting division Passages for airflow
  • Nostrils to bronchioles
  • Respiratory division Gas exchange regions
  • Alveoli
  • Upper respiratory tract Parts in the head and
    neck
  • Nose through larynx
  • Lower respiratory tract Parts in the thorax
  • Trachea through lungs

4
Nose
  • Functions
  • warms, cleanses, humidifies inhaled air
  • detects odors
  • resonating chamber that amplifies the voice

5
Upper Respiratory Tract
6
Nasal Cavity - Conchae and Meatuses
  • Superior, middle and inferior nasal conchae
  • 3 folds of tissue on lateral wall of nasal fossa
  • mucous membranes supported by thin scroll-like
    turbinate bones
  • Meatuses
  • narrow air passage beneath each conchae
  • narrowness and turbulence ensures air contacts
    mucous membranes

7
Nasal Cavity - Mucosa
  • Olfactory mucosa
  • lines roof of nasal fossa
  • Respiratory mucosa
  • lines rest of nasal cavity with ciliated
    pseudostratified epithelium
  • Defensive role of mucosa
  • mucus (from goblet cells) traps inhaled particles
  • bacteria destroyed by lysozyme

8
Nasal Cavity - Cilia and Erectile Tissue
  • Function of cilia of respiratory epithelium
  • sweep debris-laden mucus into pharynx to be
    swallowed
  • Erectile tissue of inferior concha
  • venous plexus that rhythmically engorges with
    blood and shifts flow of air from one side of
    fossa to the other once or twice an hour to
    prevent drying
  • Spontaneous epistaxis (nosebleed)
  • most common site is inferior concha

9
  • Nasopharynx
  • pseudostratified epithelium
  • posterior to choanae, dorsal to soft palate
  • receives auditory tubes and contains pharyngeal
    tonsil
  • 90? downward turn traps large particles (gt10?m)

10
  • Oropharynx
  • stratifeid squamous epithelium
  • space between soft palate and root of tongue,
    inferiorly as far as hyoid bone, contains
    palatine and lingual tonsils

11
  • Laryngopharynx
  • stratified squamous
  • hyoid bone to level of cricoid cartilage

12
  • Glottis vocal cords and opening between
  • Epiglottis
  • flap of tissue that guards glottis
  • directs food and drink to esophagus

13
  • Epiglottic cartilage - most superior
  • Thyroid cartilage largest laryngeal prominence
  • Cricoid cartilage - connects larynx to trachea
  • Arytenoid cartilages (2) - posterior to thyroid
    cartilage
  • Corniculate cartilages (2) - attached to
    arytenoid cartilages like a pair of little horns
  • Cuneiform cartilages (2) - support soft tissue
    between arytenoids and epiglottis

14
Trachea
  • Rigid tube 4.5 in. long and 2.5 in. diameter.
  • Anterior to esophagus
  • Supported by 16 to 20 C-shaped cartilaginous
    rings
  • opening in rings faces posteriorly towards
    esophagus
  • trachealis spans opening in rings, adjusts
    airflow by expanding or contracting
  • Larynx and trachea lined with ciliated
    pseudostratified epithelium which functions as
    mucociliary escalator

15
Mucociliary Escalator
16
Lung Lobes
  • Right lung has 3 lobes
  • Superior
  • Middle (smallest)
  • Inferior
  • Left Lung has 2 lobes
  • Room for the heart
  • Carina

17
Bronchial Tree
  • Primary bronchi (C-shaped rings)
  • from trachea after 2-3 cm enter hilum of lungs
  • right bronchus slightly wider and more vertical
    (aspiration)
  • Secondary (lobar) bronchi (overlapping plates)
  • one for each lobe of lung
  • Tertiary (segmental) bronchi (overlapping plates)
  • 10 right, 8 left

18
Bronchial Tree
  • Bronchioles (lack cartilage)
  • layer of smooth muscle
  • pulmonary lobule is the portion ventilated by one
    bronchiole
  • divides into 50 - 80 terminal bronchioles
  • Each divides into 2-10 alveolar ducts end in
    alveolar sacs
  • Alveoli
  • main site for gas exchange

19
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20
Pleurae and Pleural Fluid
  • Similar to the pericardium except around the
    lungs
  • Visceral (on lungs) and parietal (lines rib cage)
    pleurae
  • Pleural cavity - space between pleurae,
    lubricated with fluid
  • Functions
  • reduce friction
  • compartmentalization

21
Pulmonary Ventilation
  • Breathing (pulmonary ventilation) one cycle of
    inspiration and expiration
  • quiet respiration at rest
  • forced respiration during exercise
  • Flow of air in and out of lung requires a
    pressure difference between air pressure within
    lungs and outside body

22
Diaphragm
23
Respiratory Muscles
  • Diaphragm (dome shaped)
  • contraction flattens diaphragm
  • Scalenes
  • hold first pair of ribs stationary
  • External and internal intercostals
  • stiffen thoracic cage increases diameter
  • Pectoralis minor, sternocleidomastoid and erector
    spinae muscles
  • used in forced inspiration
  • Abdominals and latissimus dorsi
  • forced expiration (to sing, cough, sneeze)

24
Neural Control of Breathing
  • Breathing depends on repetitive stimuli from
    brain
  • Neurons in medulla oblongata and pons control
    unconscious breathing
  • Voluntary control provided by motor cortex
  • Inspiratory neurons fire during inspiration
  • Expiratory neurons fire during forced expiration
  • Fibers of phrenic nerve go to diaphragm
    intercostal nerves to intercostal muscles

25
Respiratory Control Centers
  • Respiratory nuclei in medulla
  • The Dorsal Respiratory Group (formerly called the
    inspiratory center)
  • The Ventral Respiratory Group (formerly called
    the expiratory center )
  • Pons
  • The Pontine Respiratory Center (formerly the
    pneumotaxic and apneustic centers)

26
Input to Respiratory Centers
  • From limbic system and hypothalamus
  • respiratory effects of pain and emotion
  • From airways and lungs
  • irritant receptors in respiratory mucosa
  • stimulate vagal afferents to medulla, results in
    bronchoconstriction or coughing
  • stretch receptors in airways - inflation reflex
  • excessive inflation triggers reflex
  • stops inspiration
  • From chemoreceptors
  • monitor blood pH, CO2 and O2 levels

27
Chemoreceptors (found near baroreceptors)
  • Peripheral chemoreceptors
  • found in major blood vessels
  • aortic bodies
  • signals medulla by vagus nerves
  • carotid bodies
  • signals medulla by glossopharyngeal nerves
  • Central chemoreceptors
  • in medulla
  • primarily monitor pH of CSF

28
Pressure and Flow
  • Atmospheric pressure drives respiration
  • 1 atmosphere (atm) 760 mmHg
  • Intrapulmonary pressure and lung volume
  • pressure is inversely proportional to volume
  • for a given amount of gas, as volume ?, pressure
    ? and as volume ?, pressure ?
  • Pressure gradients
  • difference between atmospheric and intrapulmonary
    pressure
  • created by changes in volume thoracic cavity

29
Respiratory Cycle
  • Atmospheric pressure drives respiration
  • 1 atmosphere (atm) 760 mmHg
  • ? intrapulmonary pressure
  • lungs expand with visceral pleura
  • 500 ml of air flows with a quiet breath

30
Passive Expiration
  • During quiet breathing, expiration achieved by
    elasticity of lungs and thoracic cage
  • As volume of thoracic cavity ?, intrapulmonary
    pressure ? and air is expelled
  • After inspiration, phrenic nerves continue to
    stimulate diaphragm to produce a braking action
    to elastic recoil

Forced Expiration
  • Internal intercostal muscles depress the ribs
  • Contract abdominal muscles
  • ? intra-abdominal pressure forces diaphragm
    upward
  • ? pressure on thoracic cavity

31
Thats it for today
32
Pneumothorax
  • Presence of air in pleural cavity
  • Collapse of lung (or part of lung) is called
    atelectasis

33
Other causes of Atelectasis
  • Atelectasis is the decrease or loss of air in all
    or part of the lung
  • Tumors obstructing a bronchus
  • Foreign body (an inhaled marble?)
  • Serious pneumonia
  • Lack of surfactant
  • Smoke inhalation
  • Post-operative complication

34
Factors that affect resistance to airflow
Compliance is reduced by smoking and by fibrotic
conditions such as sarcoidosis or lupus
  • Pulmonary compliance
  • distensibility of lungs
  • Bronchiolar diameter
  • primary control over resistance to airflow
  • bronchoconstriction
  • triggered by airborne irritants, cold air,
    parasympathetic stimulation, histamine
  • bronchodilation
  • sympathetic nerves, epinephrine

Asthma
35
Alveolar Surface Tension
  • Thin film of water needed for gas exchange
  • creates surface tension that acts to collapse
    alveoli and distal bronchioles
  • Pulmonary surfactant decreases surface tension
  • Premature infants that lack surfactant suffer
    from respiratory distress syndrome

36
Measurements of Ventilation
  • Spirometer - measures ventilation
  • Respiratory volumes
  • tidal volume volume of air in one quiet breath
  • inspiratory reserve volume
  • air in excess of tidal inspiration that can be
    inhaled with maximum effort
  • expiratory reserve volume
  • air in excess of tidal expiration that can be
    exhaled with maximum effort
  • residual volume (keeps alveoli inflated)
  • air remaining in lungs after maximum expiration

37
  • Respiratory volumes
  • tidal volume
  • inspiratory reserve volume
  • expiratory reserve volume
  • residual volume
  • Vital capacity
  • total amount of air that can be exhaled with
    effort after maximum inspiration
  • assesses strength of thoracic muscles and
    pulmonary function

38
What influences lung volume and capacity?
  • Age - ? lung compliance, respiratory muscles
    weaken
  • Exercise - maintains strength of respiratory
    muscles
  • Body size - proportional, big body/large lungs
  • Restrictive disorders
  • ? compliance and vital capacity
  • Obstructive disorders
  • interfere with airflow, expiration requires more
    effort or less complete

39
Composition of Air
  • Mixture of gases each contributes its partial
    pressure
  • At sea level 1 atm. of pressure 760 mmHg
  • Air is about 79 nitrogen 597 mmHg
  • Air is only about 21 oxygen 159 mmHg
  • Air has almost no carbon dioxide 0.3 mmHg
  • In Denver (or Reno) atmospheric pressure 625
    (to 645) mmHg
  • Air is about 79 nitrogen 494 (510) mmHg
  • Air is only about 21 oxygen 131 (135) mmHg
  • Air has almost no carbon dioxide 0.3 mmHg

40
Alveolar Gas Exchange
  • Important for gas exchange between air in lungs
    and blood in capillaries
  • Gases diffuse down their concentration gradients
  • Amount of gas that dissolves in water is
    determined by its solubility in water and its
    partial pressure in air

41
Alveolar Gas Exchange
  • Time required for gases to equilibrate 0.25 sec
  • RBC transit time at rest 0.75 sec to pass
    through alveolar capillary
  • RBC transit time with vigorous exercise 0.3 sec

What percentage of O2 loading at 0.75 sec transit
time is now possible?
42
Factors Affecting Gas Exchange
  • Membrane thickness - only 0.5 ?m thick
  • Membrane surface area - 100 ml blood in alveolar
    capillaries, spread over 70 m2
  • Ventilation-perfusion coupling
  • areas of good ventilation need good perfusion
    (vasodilation)

43
Oxygen Transport
  • Concentration in arterial blood
  • 20 ml/dl
  • 98.5 bound to hemoglobin
  • 1.5 dissolved
  • Binding to hemoglobin
  • each heme group of 4 globin chains may bind O2
  • oxyhemoglobin (HbO2 )
  • deoxyhemoglobin (HHb)

44
Carbon Dioxide Transport
  • As bicarbonate (and carbonic acid) - 90
  • CO2 H2O ? H2CO3 ? HCO3- H
  • As carbaminohemoglobin (HbCO2)- 5 binds to amino
    groups of Hb (and plasma proteins)
  • As dissolved gas - 5

45
Systemic Gas Exchange
  • CO2 loading
  • carbonic anhydrase in RBC catalyzes
  • CO2 H2O ? H2CO3 ? HCO3- H
  • chloride shift
  • keeps reaction proceeding
  • exchanges HCO3- for Cl-
  • (H binds to hemoglobin)

46
Systemic Gas Exchange
  • O2 unloading
  • H binding to HbO2 ? its affinity for O2
  • Hb arrives 97 saturated
  • Hb leaves 75 saturated
  • venous reserve

47
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48
Reactions in the alveolus are the reverse of
systemic gas exchange
49
Factors Affect O2 Unloading
  • Active tissues need oxygen!
  • ambient PO2 active tissue has ? PO2 O2 is
    released
  • temperature active tissue has ? temp O2 is
    released

50
Factors Affect O2 Unloading
  • Active tissues need oxygen!
  • Bohr effect active tissue has ? CO2, which
    lowers pH (muscle burn) O2 is released

51
Factors Affecting CO2 Loading
  • Haldane effect
  • HbO2 does not bind CO2 as well as
    deoxyhemoglobin
  • low level of HbO2 (as in active tissue) enables
    blood to transport more CO2

52
Blood Chemistry and Respiratory Rhythm
  • Rate and depth of breathing adjusted to maintain
    levels of
  • pH
  • PCO2
  • PO2
  • Lets look at their effects on respiration

53
Effects of Hydrogen Ions
  • pH of CSF (most powerful respiratory stimulus)
  • Respiratory acidosis (pH lt 7.35) caused by
    failure of pulmonary ventilation
  • hypercapnia PCO2 gt 43 mmHg
  • CO2 easily crosses blood-brain barrier
  • in CSF the CO2 reacts with water and releases H
  • central chemoreceptors strongly stimulate
    inspiratory center
  • blowing off CO2 pushes reaction to the left
    CO2 (expired) H2O ? H2CO3 ? HCO3- H
  • The induction of hyperventilation reduces H
    (reduces acid)

54
Effects of Hydrogen Ions
  • Respiratory alkalosis (pH gt 7.45) caused by
    hyperventilation
  • hypocapnia PCO2 lt 37 mmHg
  • The induction of hypoventilation (? CO2), pushes
    reaction to the right ? CO2 H2O ? H2CO3 ?
    HCO3- H
  • ? H (increases acid), lowers pH to normal
  • pH imbalances can have metabolic causes
  • eg - uncontrolled diabetes mellitus can cause
    acidosis
  • fat oxidation causes ketoacidosis, may be
    compensated for by Kussmaul respiration (deep
    rapid breathing)

55
Hypoxia and dyspnea
  • Hypoxia is a deficiency in the amount of oxygen
    reaching the tissues
  • Dyspnea is difficult or labored breathing, air
    hunger
  • Cyanosis is a blueish color of the skin and
    mucous membranes
  • Causes of hypoxia
  • hypoxemic hypoxia - usually due to inadequate
    pulmonary gas exchange
  • high altitudes, drowning, aspiration, respiratory
    arrest, degenerative lung diseases, CO poisoning
  • ischemic hypoxia - inadequate circulation
  • anemic hypoxia - anemia
  • histotoxic hypoxia - metabolic poison (cyanide)
  • Primary effect of hypoxia
  • tissue necrosis, organs with high metabolic
    demands affected first

56
Oxygen Excess
  • Oxygen toxicity pure O2 breathed at 2.5 atm or
    greater
  • generates free radicals and H2O2 which destroys
    enzymes
  • damages
  • CNS seizures, coma death
  • Eyes blindness
  • Lungs painful breathing
  • Hyperbaric oxygen (high O2 under increased
    atmospheric pressures)
  • formerly used to treat premature infants

57
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
  • Asthma (if it is poorly controlled)
  • allergen triggers histamine release
  • intense bronchoconstriction (blocks air flow)
  • COPD is most often associated with smoking
  • chronic bronchitis
  • leads to emphysema

58
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
  • Chronic bronchitis
  • cilia immobilized and ? in number
  • goblet cells enlarge and produce excess mucus
  • sputum formed (mucus and cellular debris)
  • ideal growth media for bacteria
  • leads to chronic infection and bronchial
    inflammation

59
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
  • Emphysema
  • alveolar walls break down
  • much less respiratory membrane for gas exchange
  • lungs fibrotic and less elastic
  • air passages collapse
  • obstruct outflow of air
  • air trapped in lungs

60
Effects of COPD
  • ? pulmonary compliance and vital capacity
  • Hypoxemia, hypercapnia, respiratory acidosis
  • hypoxemia stimulates erythropoietin release and
    leads to polycythemia
  • Cor pulmonale
  • hypertrophy and potential failure of right heart
    due to obstruction of pulmonary circulation

61
Progression of Lung Cancer
  • Lung cancer accounts for more deaths than any
    other form of cancer
  • most important cause is smoking (15 carcinogens)
  • 90 originate in primary bronchi
  • Tumor invades bronchial wall, compresses airway
    may cause atelectasis
  • Often first sign is coughing up blood
  • Metastasis is rapid usually occurs by time of
    diagnosis
  • common sites pericardium, heart, bones, liver,
    lymph nodes and brain
  • Prognosis poor after diagnosis
  • only 7 of patients survive 5 years
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