Title: Respiratory System
1Respiratory System
- As always, copy everything in RED and any
pictures you are told to.
2What is Respiration?
- Cellular respiration producing energy (ATP)
from the breakdown of molecules in food in the
presence of oxygen - Respiration oxygen and carbon dioxide are
exchanged between cells, blood, and air in the
lungs - What does CPR stand for?-- cardiopulmonary
resuscitation (rescue breathing combined with
chest compressions
3Human Respiratory System
- Function exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide
- Structures
- Nose filters air as it enters the body
- Pharynx tube in the back of the mouth (throat)
passes air and food - Larynx voice box vocal cords (two folds of
elastic tissue) - Trachea windpipe
- Epiglottis covers entrance of trachea when you
swallow - Bronchi large passageways leading air to each
lung - Bronchioles are branches from bronchi in each
lung - Lungs gas exchange
- Alveoli tiny air sacs clustered at the end of
the bronchioles and wrapped in capillaries
4Figure 37-14 The Respiratory System
Section 37-3
Pharynx
Larynx
Nose
Trachea
Mouth
Lung
Bronchiole
Bronchus
Epiglottis
Alveoli
Bronchioles
Diaphragm
Capillaries
Edge of pleural membrane
5Gas Exchange
- 350 million alveoli in a healthy lung
- Increase surface area for gas exchange across
capillaries - Oxygen in alveoli diffuses across capillaries
into blood - Carbon dioxide in blood diffuses across
capillaries into alveoli - Very efficient gas exchange
- Inhaled air contains 21 oxygen and 0.04 carbon
dioxide - Exhaled air contains 15 oxygen and 4 carbon
dioxide
6Figure 37-15 Gas Exchange in the Lungs
Alveoli
Section 37-3
Bronchiole
Capillary
7Breathing
- The movement of air into and out of the lungs
- At the bottom of the chest cavity is a large flat
muscle diaphragm - The lungs are sealed in two sacs pleural
membranes - When you breathe in (inhale), the diaphragm
contracts and expands the volume of the chest
cavity, creating a partial vacuum in the pleural
membranes, allowing atmospheric pressure to fill
the lungs with air - When you breathe out (exhale), the diaphragm
relaxes and decreases the volume of the chest
cavity, increasing the pressure in the chest
cavity and forcing air out of the pleural
membranes
8Figure 37-16 The Mechanics of Breathing
Section 37-3
Air exhaled
Air inhaled
Rib cage descends
Rib cage rises
Diaphragm
Diaphragm
Inhalation
Exhalation
9How breathing is controlled
- Although you can voluntarily hold your breath,
eventually your body will force you to breathe - Breathing is controlled in the medulla oblongata
in the brain, which is part of the autonomic
nervous system - Cells monitor the amount of carbon dioxide in the
blood and as it increases, nerve impulses cause
the diaphragm to contract bringing air into the
lungs
10Tobacco creates problems
- Smoking tobacco damages and eventually destroys
the protective system by paralyzing cilia and
trapping mucus in airways - Tobacco contains
- Nicotine addictive, stimulate drug that
increases the heart rate and blood pressure - Carbon monoxide poisonous gas that blocks the
transport of oxygen by hemoglobin in the blood - Tar carcinogen (causes cancer)
11Respiratory diseases caused by smoking
- Chronic bronchitis bronchi become swollen and
clogged with mucus, so constant coughing to try
and force the particles out - Emphysema respiratory disease due to loss of
elasticity of lung tissue making breathing very
difficult - Lung cancer deadly because it spreads to other
parts of body - Heart disease narrowing of blood vessels
increases blood pressure and makes the heart work
harder
12Circulatory System
13Circulation and Respiration
- Each breath brings oxygen rich air into your body
- Your cells need that oxygen
- Your heart delivers oxygen to your cells
- Working together, your circulatory and
respiratory systems supply cells throughout the
body with the nutrients and oxygen that they need
to stay alive!
14Function
- The circulatory system transports substances
including oxygen, nutrients and wastes to and
from cells responding to changing demands by
diffusion (from high to low concentration along
concentration gradient).
15Structure
- Humans have a closed circulatory system.
- Blood is pumped through a system of vessels
- (In an open system, blood flows in vessels and
sinuses/gills) - Sometimes the circulatory system is also called
the cardiovascular system because - Cardio heart
- Vascular vessels
- The human circulatory system consists of
- The heart
- A series of blood vessels
- Blood that flows through them
16The Heart
- Located near the center of your chest
- A hollow organ about the size of your fist
composed of cardiac muscle. - Enclosed in a protective sac of tissue called the
pericardium - Inside there are two thin layers of epithelial
and connective tissue - Contractions of the myocardium, a thick cardiac
muscle, pump blood through the circulatory system - The heart contracts about 72 times a minute
- Each contraction pumps about 70 mL of blood
17Heart
- Septum, or wall, separates the right side from
the left side preventing mixing of oxygen-rich
blood and oxygen-poor blood - Flaps of connective tissue called valves divide
each side into 2 chambers totaling 4 chambers - Upper chambers receive blood atrium
- Lower chambers pump blood out of heart ventricle
18Types of Circulation
- Pulmonary circulation from right side of the
heart to lungs where carbon dioxide leaves the
blood and oxygen is absorbed - Systemic circulation from left side of the
heart to organs - Coronary circulation through heart tissue
19Pulmonary Circulation
- The right side of the heart pumps blood from the
heart to the lungs - In the lungs, carbon dioxide leaves the blood
while oxygen is absorbed. - The oxygen-rich blood goes into the left side of
the heart
20Systemic Circulation
- The oxygen-rich blood from the left side of the
heart is pumped to the rest of the body - Oxygen-poor blood returns to the right side of
the heart - This blood is oxygen-poor because the cells
absorbed the oxygen and released carbon dioxide
into the blood - The oxygen-poor blood is ready for another trip
to the lungs to get oxygen again
21(No Transcript)
22Figure 37-2 The Circulatory System
Section 37-1
23Blood Flow through the heart
- Blood leaves the heart in arteries, and blood
returns to heart in veins. - Oxygenated blood returns from the lungs through
the pulmonary veins to the left atrium. - Oxygenated blood is pumped from the left atrium
through the mitral valve to the left ventricle. - Oxygenated blood leaves the left ventricle
through the aortic valve to the aorta, which is
the largest artery of your body. - The aorta branches into various arteries pumping
blood through your body. - Deoxygenated blood returns from the top of your
body through the superior vena cava and from the
bottom of your body through the inferior vena
cava to the right atrium. - Deoxygenated blood is pumped from the right
atrium through the tricuspid valve to the right
ventricle. - Deoxygenated blood leaves the right ventricle
through the pulmonary valve to the pulmonary
arteries. - The pulmonary arteries pump blood to the lungs to
absorb oxygen and release carbon dioxide.
Heart circulation animation http//www.nhlbi.nih.
gov/health/dci/Diseases/hhw/hhw_pumping.html
24The Path of Blood KNOW THIS!!!
25Valves
- Blood enters into the atria of the heart,
separated from the ventricles by valves,
preventing back-flow of blood keeping the blood
flowing in one direction - When the atria contract, the valves open and
blood flows into the ventricles - When the ventricles contract, the valves close
preventing blood from flowing back into the atria
and blood flows out of the heart - At the exits of the ventricles, there are valves
that prevent blood from flowing back into the
heart - The lub-dup sound of your heart is caused by
the closing of the hearts valves. The lub is
when the ventricles contract and blood being
forced against the artioventricular or A-V
(tricuspid or mitral) valves. The dup is the
blood being forced against the semilunar (aortic
or pulmonary) valves.
26Figure 37-3 The Structures of the Heart
Section 37-1
Left Atrium
Right Atrium
Left Ventricle
Septum
Right Ventricle
27Heartbeat
- There are two muscle contractions in the heart
- The atria
- The ventricles
- Each contraction begins in a small group of
cardiac muscle cells in the right atrium that
stimulate the rest of the muscle cells
sinoatrial node (SA node) - Since the sinoatrial node sets the pace for the
heart it is also called the pacemaker - The impulse spreads from the pacemaker through
fibers in the atria to the atrioventricular node
(AV node) and through fibers in the ventricles - When the atria contract, blood flows into the
ventricles - When the ventricle contract, blood flows out of
the heart
28Blood vessels
- Blood circulates in one direction and it is moved
by the pumping of the heart - As blood flows through the circulatory system, it
moves through three types of blood vessels - Arteries
- Capillaries
- Veins
29Arteries
- Large vessels that carry blood away from the
heart to tissues of the body - Except for the pulmonary arteries, all arteries
carry oxygen-rich blood. - Arteries have thick walls of elastic connective
tissue, contractible smooth muscle, and
epithelial cells that help them withstand the
powerful pressure produced when the heart
contracts and pushes blood into the arteries.
30Capillaries
- The smallest of the blood vessels connecting
arteries and veins - Walls are one cell thick allowing for easier
diffusion of nutrients and oxygen from
capillaries to body cells and wastes and carbon
dioxide from body cells to capillaries
31Veins
- Return blood to the heart
- Veins have walls of connective tissue and smooth
muscle - Large veins contain valves that keep blood
flowing towards the heart - Many veins are located near skeletal muscles, so
when the muscles contract, they help force blood
through the veins, even against gravity - Exercise helps prevent accumulation of blood in
limbs and stretching veins out of shape
32Blood Pressure
- The heart produces pressure when it contracts.
- The force of blood on the arteries walls blood
pressure - Blood pressure decreases when the heart relaxes,
but there must always be some pressure to keep
the blood flowing - Doctors measure blood pressure with a
sphygmomanometer recording two numbers - Systolic pressure force felt in arteries when
ventricles contract - Diastolic pressure force of blood felt in
arteries when ventricles relax - Average adults blood pressure 120/80
33High Blood Pressure
- Also known as Hypertension
- Forces heart to work harder, which may weaken or
damage the heart muscle and vessels - More likely to develop heart disease and
increased risk of heart attack and stroke
34Heart Attack
- A medical emergency
- Coronary arteries (supplying heart blood) bring
oxygen and nutrients to the heart muscle itself - Blockage of coronary artery may damage or kill
part of heart muscle (myocardium) due to lack of
oxygen heart attack - Symptoms include chest pain/pressure, feeling of
heartburn/indigestion, sudden dizziness, or brief
loss of consciousness
35Stroke
- Blood clots may break free from vessels and get
stuck in a blood vessel leading to a part of the
brain stroke - Brain cells relying on that vessel may begin to
die from lack of oxygen and brain function in
that region may be lost - Strokes can also occur when a weakened artery in
the brain burst, flooding the area with blood
36Prevention
- Cardiovascular diseases are easy to prevent
- Exercise increases respiratory systems
efficiency - Weight control reduces body fat and stress
- Sensible diet low in saturated fat reduces risk
of heart disease - Not smoking reduces risk of heart disease