Title: Chapter 19 Respiratory System
1Chapter 19Respiratory System
Respiration is the process of exchanging gases
between the atmosphere and body cells. Consists
of the following events
- ventilation
- external respiration
- transport
- internal respiration
- cellular respiration
2Two Main Divisions
- Upper Respiratory
- Consists of the nose and throat (pharynx)
- Lower Respiratory
- Consists of the larynx, trachea, bronchi and lungs
3Organs of the Respiratory System
4Organs of the Respiratory System
5Upper Respiratory Tract
6Mucous in Respiratory Tract
Cilia move mucus and trapped particles from the
nasal cavity to the pharynx
7Nose
- External portion
- Composed of cartilage covered by skin
- Internal portion
- Nasal Cavity
- Large cavity in the skull inferior to the cranium
and superior to the mouth
8Nose
- Nasal Septum
- Vertical partition that divides the nasal cavity
- Anterior portion made of cartilage
- Posterior portion made of the vomer bone and the
perpendicular plate of the ethmoid bone
9Clinical Application Nose
- Rhinoplasty
- nose job
- Surgical procedure in which the external
structures are altered - Usually for cosmetic reasons
- Occasionally to repair fractures or deviated
septum
- Septoplasty-
- Surgery to correct a deviated (crooked) septum
- Often done to correct breathing problems
resulting from blockages - Can also be cosmetic
10Sinuses
Air-filled spaces in maxillary, frontal, ethmoid,
and sphenoid bones
11Nose Physiology
- Interior specialized for 3 functions
- Air is warmed, moistened and filtered
- Olfactory stimuli received--only direct stimulus
to the brain - Large, resonating chamber helps produce speech
sounds
12Pharynx
13Pharynx
- Funnel-shaped structure about 13 cm long--starts
at the back of the nasal cavity and extends to
the cricoid cartilage of the larynx - 2 functions
- Passage for food and air
- Resonating chamber for speech sounds
14Pharynx
- 3 parts of the pharynx
- Nasopharynx
- Posterior to the internal nasal cavity and
extends to the plane of the soft palate - Exchanges small amounts of air with the auditory
(Eustachian) tubes - Equalizes air pressure between atmospheric air
and air pressure in the middle ear
15Pharynx
- Oropharynx
- Posterior to the oral cavity
- Extends from the soft palate to the level of the
hyoid bone - Contains the opening from the mouth
- Common passageway for air, food and drink
16Pharynx
- Laryngopharynx
- Extends from the hyoid bone level and becomes
continuous with the esophagus
17Larynx
- Short passageway that connects the pharynx with
the trachea - Along the midline of the neck between the C4
(cervical 4) and C6 (cervical 6) vertebrae - Contains thyroid cartilage, epiglottis, cricoid
cartilage, and glottis
18Larynx
19Larynx
- Thyroid Cartilage
- 2 plates of cartilage that form the anterior wall
of the larynx - Typically larger in males
- Adams apple
20Larynx
- Epiglottis
- Large leaf-shaped piece of cartilage lying on top
of the larynx - Stem attached to the thyroid cartilage
- Leaf moves up and down like a trap door
- Swallowing causes the larynx to move up, which
causes the epiglottis to cover the glottis
21Larynx
- Glottis
- Vocal folds and the space between the folds
- Voice Production
- Muscles contract, pull on the elastic ligaments,
which stretch the vocal folds out into the air
passage (narrows the glottis) - Air is pushed through and vibrates
- Sends sound waves into the pharynx, nose and
mouth - Higher pressurelouder sounds
- Pitch controlled by vocal fold tension
(tighthigh) - Male folds are thicker, producing lower sounds
22Vocal Cords
23Larynx
- Cricoid Cartilage
- Forms anterior wall of the larynx
- Attached to the first ring of cartilage of the
trachea
24Trachea
- Passageway for air
- 12 cm long, 2.5 cm diameter
- Anterior to the esophagus
- Extends from the larynx to the 5th thoracic
vertebra - 16-20 incomplete rings of hyaline cartilage
- Allows for anterior protection and posterior
flexibility for swallowing
25Tracheostomy
- Performed to allow air to bypass an obstruction
within the larynx - Skin incision, followed by a small longitudinal
incision into the trachea - Patient inspires through a tube placed in the
incision
26Intubation
- Tube placed into the mouth or nose and forced
through the larynx and trachea - Tube wall pushes back any obstruction
- Mucus blockage sucked out through the tube
27Bronchial Tree
28Bronchi
- Trachea divides at the sternum
- Right and left primary bronchus
- Right primary bronchus is more vertical, shorter
and wider than the left - Made of incomplete rings of cartilage and lined
by pseudostratified ciliated epithelium
29Secondary Bronchi
- Lobar
- Primary split after entering each lung
- Secondary bronchi go to each lobe of each lung
- Secondary split into tertiary (segmental) bronchi
- divide into bronchioles
- split into terminal bronchioles
30Bronchi
- More Branching Tissue Changes
- 1st- rings of cartilage replace by plates that
disappear in the bronchioles - 2nd- as cartilage amount decreases, smooth muscle
increases - 3rd-epithelium changes from pseudostratified
ciliated to simple cuboidal in the terminal
bronchioles
31Clinical Application Bronchi
- Asthma
- Smooth muscle of bronchioles contract, reducing
the diameter of the airway - Inhalers (bronchioles dilators) relax the muscle
and open the airways
32Alveoli
- Important in gas exchange
- Surrounded by capillaries
- 3 specialized cells in alveolar sac
- Squamous pulmonary epithelial cells
- allow for diffusion of O2 CO2 from surrounding
vascular cells - Septal cells--cuboidal cells
- Produce surfactant--phospholipid substance that
lowers surface tension - Alveolar macrophages (dust cells)-phagocytic
cells
33Alveoli
34Clinical Application Alveoli
- Nebulization
- Administering medication in the form of droplets
that are suspended in air - Patient inhales the medication as a fine mist
35Diffusion Across Respiratory Membrane
36Lungs
37Lungs
- 2 layers of membrane (pleural membrane) enclose
and protect each lung - Visceral Pleura - covers lungs
- Parietal Pleura - attached to the wall of the
thoracic cavity - Pleural cavity - space between each pleura,
filled with fluid
38Transverse Section of Lungs
39Lungs
- Base
- broad inferior portion that is concave and fits
over the diaphragm - Apex
- narrow superior portion
- Costal surface
- touch the ribs
40Lungs
- Hilus
- area in which bronchi, blood vessels, lymphatic
vessels and nervous tissue enter and leave the
lungs - Cardiac notch
- ONLY on the left lung
- Right lung is thicker, broader and shorter than
left
41Lungs
- Lobes and Fissures
- Superior lobe
- above oblique fissure
- Both lungs
- Inferior lobe
- below oblique fissure
- Both lungs
- Middle lobe
- ONLY in the right lung
- Subdivision of right superior lobe
42Lungs
- Oblique fissure
- extends downward and forward
- Both lungs
- Horizontal fissure
- only in the right lung
- Divides superior and middle lobes
43Lungs
- Each lobe receives its own secondary (lobar)
bronchus - Each secondary bronchus named after the lobe it
serves
44Lungs
- Bronchopulmonary Segment
- Section of lung that surrounds a tertiary
bronchus
45Lungs
- Lobules
- Small compartments of a bronchopulmonary segment
- Wrapped in elastic connective tissue
- Contain lymphatic vessels, arteriole, venule, and
branch from terminal bronchiole - Terminal bronchioles split into respiratory
bronchioles, which splits into alveolar ducts - Alveolar ducts lead to alveolar sacs
46Breathing Mechanism
- Breathing or ventilation is the movement of air
from outside the body into the bronchial tree and
alveoli - air movements of inspiration and expiration
- changes in the size of the thoracic cavity due
to changes in pressure
47Inspiration
- Moving the plunger of a syringe causes air to
move in or out - Air movements in and out of the lungs occur in
much the same way
48Inspiration
- Boyles Law
- Pressure of a gas in a closed container is
inversely proportional to the volume of the
container
49Lungs at Rest
When lungs are at rest, the pressure on the
inside of the lungs is equal to the pressure on
the outside of the thorax
50Inspiration
- Intra-alveolar pressure decreases to about 758mm
Hg as the thoracic cavity enlarges - Atmospheric pressure forces air into the airways
51Inspiration
Shape of thorax at end of normal inspiration
Shape of thorax at end of maximal inspiration
aided by contraction of sternocleidomastoid and
pectoralis minor muscles
52Inspiration
- Lung volume increases 2 ways
- Diaphragm
- Main inspiratory muscle
- Contraction causes it to flatten and increase
vertical dimension of thoracic cavity - May increase 1 cm to 10 cm
- Accounts for movement of 75 of air entering
lungs
53Inspiration
- External Intercostal Muscles
- contractions pull ribs up pushing sternum out
- Increases diameter of thoracic cavity
54Major Events in Inspiration
55Expiration
- due to elastic recoil of the lung tissues and
abdominal organs
56Expiration
- NORMAL expiration is a passive process
- Active process during high levels of ventilation
57Maximal Expiration
- contraction of abdominal wall muscles forcing
diaphragm up - contraction of posterior internal intercostal
muscles
58Major Events in Expiration
59Ventilation
- 1 ventilation (respiration) 1 inspiration 1
expiration - Normal adults ventilate about 12 times per minute
60Respiratory Volumes and Capacities
61Respiratory Volumes and Capacities
- Pulmonary Reserve volume
- Inhaling deeply
- 3100 ml above the tidal volume
- Expiratory Reserve volume
- Forcibly exhaling
- 1200ml below the tidal volume
62Respiratory Volumes and Capacities
- Residual volume
- Amount left after expiratory reserve volume is
expelled - Because some air remains in airways inside the
lungs - 1200ml
- Minimal volume
- Lungs with only minimal volume will not float
- Fetal lungs contain no air, so lungs of stillborn
will not float
63External Respiration
- Exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the
alveoli of lungs and the pulmonary blood
capillaries - Alveolar air has a partial pressure of oxygen of
105-mmHg pO2 - Daltons Law
- Each gas in mixture exerts its own pressure as if
all the other gases were not present
64External Respiration Daltons Law
- pO2 of deoxygenated blood in the alveolar
capillaries is only 40 mmHg - O2 diffuses from alveoli into the deoxygenated
blood until equilibrium is reached - gives oxygenated blood a pO2 of 105 mmHg (equal
to atmospheric air) - CO2 diffuses in the opposite direction
- pCO2 in deoxygenated blood is 45 mmHg- alveolar
air is 40 mmHg
65Alveolar Ventilation
- Minute ventilation
- Tidal volume multiplied by breathing rate
- Amount of air that is moved into the respiratory
passageways
- Alveolar ventilation rate
- Major factor affecting concentrations of oxygen
and carbon dioxide in the alveoli - Volume of air that reaches alveoli
- Tidal volume minus physiologic dead space then
multiplied by breathing rate
66Respiratory Center
67Respiratory Center
68Factors Affecting Breathing
Decreased blood oxygen concentration stimulates
peripheral chemoreceptors in the carotid and
aortic bodies
69Factors Affecting Breathing
- motor impulses travel from the respiratory
center to the diaphragm and external intercostal
muscles - contraction of these muscles causes lungs to
expand - expansion stimulates stretch receptors in the
lungs - inhibitory impulses from receptors to
respiratory center prevent overinflation of lungs
70Factors Affecting Breathing
71Adaptations That Increase Effectiveness
- Thickness
- Alveolar sac- capillary complex only 2 cells
layers thick - Surface area
- More surface area the more diffusion possible
- Surface area of alveoli in the lungs is about
70m2
72Adaptations That Increase Effectiveness
- Large number of capillaries
- Allow 100 ml of blood to participate in gas
exchange at one time - Narrow Capillaries
- Allow RBCs to flow through in single file
- Provides maximum exposure
73Alveoli
- gas exchanges between the air and blood occur
within the alveoli - alveolar pores allow air to pass from one
alveolus to another
74Respiratory Membrane
- consists of the walls of the alveolus and the
capillary
75Diffusion Through Respiratory Membrane
Gases are exchanged between alveolar air and
capillary blood because of differences in partial
pressure
76Factors Affecting Efficiency
- Altitude
- atmospheric pO2 decreases as altitude increases
- Surface area
- damaged surface area (smoke, cancer, etc.)
- Small volumes
- certain drugs slow respiration rate
77Life-Span Changes
- Reflect accumulation of environmental influences
- Reflect the effects of aging in other organ
systems - Cilia less active
- Mucous thickens
- Swallowing, gagging, and coughing reflexes slow
- Macrophages in lungs lose efficiency
- Increased susceptibility to respiratory
infections - Barrel chest may develop
- Bronchial walls thin and collapse
- Dead space increases
78Clinical Application Cigarette Smoking
- Cilia disappear
- Excess mucus produced
- Lung congestion increases lung infections
- Lining of bronchioles thicken
- Bronchioles lose elasticity
- Emphysema fifteen times more common
- Lung cancer more common
- Much damage repaired when smoking stops