0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views

Semifinals Respiratory System

1. The document discusses the anatomy and physiology of the respiratory system, including the major components of the respiratory tract, lungs, and mechanisms of ventilation. 2. It describes the upper and lower respiratory tract, the role of the lungs in gas exchange, and the structures of the bronchioles and alveoli where oxygen and carbon dioxide are transferred between the lungs and bloodstream. 3. The mechanics of ventilation are explained, including the driving forces of airflow, major respiratory muscles involved, and coupling of the lungs with the thoracic cage.

Uploaded by

ino zuii javier
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
43 views

Semifinals Respiratory System

1. The document discusses the anatomy and physiology of the respiratory system, including the major components of the respiratory tract, lungs, and mechanisms of ventilation. 2. It describes the upper and lower respiratory tract, the role of the lungs in gas exchange, and the structures of the bronchioles and alveoli where oxygen and carbon dioxide are transferred between the lungs and bloodstream. 3. The mechanics of ventilation are explained, including the driving forces of airflow, major respiratory muscles involved, and coupling of the lungs with the thoracic cage.

Uploaded by

ino zuii javier
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 9

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY

BACHELOR OF SCIENCE IN NURSING


YEAR 1

SEMIFINALS: THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM

THE RESPIRATORY SYSTEM


● Consists of:
1. Respiratory Tract
▪ Nose through bronchi
2. The Lungs

RESPIRATORY TRACT
● Divided into
o upper
o lower respiratory tract

● UPPER RESPIRATORY TRACT


o From the nose through the pharynx
● Cartilage Ring: Trachea and primary bronchi
● Cartilage Plates: Secondary and Tertiary bronchi
● Pneumonia: alveoli is affected
● Bronchial asthma: bronchioles is affected

CILIARY LINING OF THE LOWER RESPIRATORY


TRACT
● Cross Section
o Cilia - beat upward and drive the debris-
laden mucus to the pharynx, where it is
● LOWER RESPIRATORY TRACT swallowed.
o The Bronchial Tree ● Longitudinal Section
o From the larynx to tertiary bronchi
o The bronchial tree extends to bronchioles
and alveoli

THE LUNGS
● The lungs overlap with the respiratory tract
● Consist of the left and the right lungs
● The left lung is divided into two lobes; the right into
three
● Receives the bronchus, blood and lymphatic vessels,
and nerves through its hilum
BRONCHIOLES AND ALVEOLI
● The bronchi extend into the alveoli
● Primary Bronchi
● Inside the lungs:
o Secondary Bronchi
o Tertiary Bronchi
o Bronchioles
o Alveoli

1
By: ino zuii javier
ALVEOLI ● DEAD SPACE
o Starts from nose to terminal bronchiole
o Where there is no gas exchange
o 150 ml

● 700 SF surface area


● Consists of :
1. Type I alveolar cells (95%), thin
2. Type II alveolar cells (5%), secrete
surfactant
3. Macrophages (dust cells), defense

SUMMARY: ANATOMY OF THE RESPIRATRY


SYSTEM
● The Respiratory Tract
● The Lungs
● Each alveolus is surrounded with a basket of
capillaries ● Alveoli
● Alveoli contain elastic fibers which helps expiration
● Gas exchange occurs only in alveoli
● Low blood pressure keeps alveoli dry

MECHANICS OF VENTILATION
● Driving Force for Air flow
● The respiratory membrane
1. The wall of the alveolus ● Resistance to Airflow
2. The endothelial wall of the capillary ● Measurements of Ventilation
3. Their fused basement membranes ● Alveolar Ventilation
● Terms:
o Inspiration or inhalation: breathing in
o Expiration or exhalation: breathing out

By: ino zuii javier


DRIVING FORCE FOR AIR FLOW
● Airflow driven by the pressure difference between
atmosphere (barometric pressure) and inside the
lungs (intrapulmonary pressure)

● During inspiration: the volume of air in the lungs


increases while the pressure decreases
● During expiration: the volume of air in the lungs
decreases but the pressure will be increased
● According to Boyle's law, if a given amount of gas
has a constant temperature, increasing its volume
decreases its pressure, and vice-versa.

MAJOR RESPIRATORY MUSCLES


● The diaphragm
● External Intercostal Muscles
● Internal Intercostal Muscles
● The Abdominal Muscles

1. The diaphragm
o The principal muscle of inspiration
o Pulls the diaphragm down, increasing all
three dimension of the thoracic cage
2. External Intercostal Muscles
o Inspiration muscles
o Increases the anteroposterior and
transverse dimensions of the chest
3. The Abdominal Muscles
o Expiration muscles
o Pulls the diaphragm up, reducing the
vertical dimension of the thoracic cage
4. The Abdominal Muscles
o Extra Expiration Muscles

COUPLING BETWEEN LUNGS AND THORACIC


CAGE
● The lungs and thoracic cage are coupled by the
pleurae.
o Visceral pleura covers the surface of each
lung; parietal pleura lines the chest cavity
● The two pleurae form the pleural cavity
● The pleural fluid serves the reduce friction during
chest expansion
● Intrapleural pessure: Th pressure in the pleural
MECHANISMS FOR THE CHANGE IN cavity is negative
INTRAPULMONARY PRESSURE
● Boyle’s law: Volume x Pressure = Constant

By: ino zuii javier


FORCED EXPIRATION: ACTIVE
● Relaxation of:
o Diaphragm
o External Intercostal Muscles
o Contraction of abdominal, internal
intercostal and other accessory respiratory
muscles

● Generation of the negative intrapleural pressure


o The thoracic cage is larger than the natural
size of the lungs

SUMMARY: DRIVING FORCE FOR AIR FLOW


● Atmosphere-lung pressure gradient
● Major Respiratory Muscles
● Coupling between lungs and thoracic cage

RESISTANCE TO AIRFLOW
● RESISTANCE
o Alveolar Surface Tension
o Elastic Resistance
o Airway Resistance
● COMPLIANCE
INSPIRATION: ACTIVE
ALVEOLAR SURFACE TENSION
● Contraction of:
o Diaphragm ● Generated by a thin film of liquid over the surface of
o External Intercostal Muscles alveolar epithelium
● Tends to cause a collapse of the alveoli

RESTING EXPIRATION: PASSIVE


● Relaxation of: ● Resists against inspiration
o Diaphragm ● Surface tension is reduced by surfactant (type II
o External Intercostal Muscles alveolar epithelial cells)
● Pre-term infants don’t have enough surfactant

By: ino zuii javier


ELASTIC RESISTANCE CHANGES IN SPIROMETRIC MEASURES
● Against inspiration due to elastic fibers in the lungs ● RESTRICTIVE DISORDERS
and chest wall o Pulmonary fibrosis
● Increases in pulmonary fibrosis o ↓compliance and ↓vital capacity (decrease)
● OBSTRUCTIVE DISORDERS
AIRWAY RESISTANCE o No change in respiratory volumes
o ↓FeV1.
● Due to friction, affected by airway caliber o One-second forced expiratory volume
● Against inspiration and respiration
● Increases during asthma attack (smooth muscle
contraction in bronchiole)

COMPLIANCE
● Reciprocal of resistance
● Indicator of ease with which the lungs expand

● SPIROMETER
o Diagnostic device that measures the
amount of air you're able to breathe in and
out and the time it takes you to exhale
completely after you take a deep breath.
o A spirometry test requires you to breathe
SUMMARY: MECHANICS OF VENTILATION
into a tube attached to a machine called a
spirometer. ● Driving Force for Air Flow
● Resistance to Airflow
● Measurements of Ventilation
● Alveolar Ventilation

NEURAL CONTROL OF VENTILATION

CENTER IN THE MEDULLA OBLONGATA


● INSPIRATORY CENTER
o Stimulates inspiration muscles
● EXPIRATORY CENTER
o Inhibits the respiratory center
o Stimulates expiration muscles

By: ino zuii javier


AFFERENT CONNECTIONS TO THE RESPIRATORY ● The the partial pressure of a gas refers to the share
CENTERS of the total pressure generated by a mixture of gases

● Oxygen and carbon dioxide cross the respiratory


membrane and the air-water interface easily

CHEMORECEPTOR-INITIATED REFLEXES
● Peripheral Chemoreceptors
o Aortic and carotid bodies
o Monitor O2, CO2, and pH of
the blood

● Central Chemoreceptors
o Close to the surface of the
medulla oblongata
o Monitor the pH of the
● Blue UN-oxygenated
cerebrospinal fluid
● Red oxygenated

OVERVIEW OF GAS EXCHANGE IN THE LUNGS

● Voluntary Control
o The motor cortex
o Bypass the brainstem respiratory centers
o Limited voluntary control

GAS EXCHANGE IN THE LUNGS FACTORS THAT AFFECT THE EFFICIENCY OF


● The gas exchange between alveolar air and the ALVEOLAR GAS EXCHANGE
blood is via diffusion of O2 and CO2 ● Partial pressure
● Diffusion of a gas is driven by O2 and CO2 partial ● Solubility
pressure gradient
● Respiratory membrane thickness/area
● Ventilation-perfusion coupling

PARTIAL PRESSURE
o High altitude
o Hyperbaric chamber
o Obstructive disease

By: ino zuii javier


SOLUBILITY ● BLOOD OXYGEN CONTENT
o Average 20 ml/dL
o Determined by:
1. Saturation of hemoglobin:
Hypoventilation CO poisoning
2. Content of hemoglobin: anemia
● Carbon monoxide competes with oxygen for
heme binding with a much higher affinity
o PROBLEM: deoxygenate hemoglobin
RESPIRATORY MEMBRANE THICKNESS/AREA o TREATMENT: hyperbaric oxygen chamber

GAS EXCHANGE IN TISSUES


1. Carbon Dioxide Loading
2. Oxygen Unloading

VENTILATION-PERFUSION COUPLING
o Average V-P ratio = 0.8
o Autoregulated by:
o ↓PO2 and ↑PCO2
▪ Vasoconstriction of pulmonary
arterioles
▪ Dilation of bronchioles

SUMMARY
● Driving Force for Gas Exchange
● Factors that affect the efficiency of alveolar
gas exchange

UTILIZATION COEFFICIENT
CARBON DIOXIDE TRANSPORT ● The amount of oxygen uptake by tissue versus the
arterial blood oxygen content
● 7% dissolved in the blood as a gas
● 23% as carbamino-hemoglobin
● 70% as carbonic acid in the plasma

OXYGEN TRANSPORT
● 98.5% of O2 in the blood are carried by hemoglobin
● The rest is physically dissolved in plasma

By: ino zuii javier


FUNCTION OF OXYGEN

OXYGEN TOXICITY
● Excessive oxygen generates hydrogen peroxide
and free radicals, which destroy enzymes and
damage nervous tissue
● Oxidative toxicity with aging

HYPERCAPNIA
o PCO2 > 43 mmHg
o Caused by hypoventilation (respiratory
diseases)

HYPOCAPNIA
o PCO2 > 37 mmHg
o Caused by hyperventilation

By: ino zuii javier


By: ino zuii javier

You might also like