Respiratory System

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 23

Respiratory System

f the Respiratory System

ulmonary Ventilation)

spiration) draws gases into the lungs.


xpiration) forces gases out of the lungs.

ning

s through the nasal cavity and paransal sinuses, inhaled air becomes turbulent. The gases in the air are

 warmed to body temperature

 humidified

 cleaned of particulate matter

unds

sal cavity, paranasal sinuses, teeth, lips, and tongue work to produce sound.

speech, singing, and nonverbal communication

ctory Sensations

e molecules are inhaled and dissolve in the mucus in the nose, the molecules can bind to receptors in the olfactory epithelium.

Body

pathways, goblet cells, mucous glands, lysozyme in the mucus all help defend the body against infection by airborne pathogens.

Air

ynx ---> larynx ---> trachea ---> primary bronchi ---> secondary bronchi ---> tertiary bronchi ---> bronchioles ---> terminal bronchioles
nchioles ---> alveolar duct ---> alveoli

or an animation that provides an overview of the respiratory system, including its functions and organs.
Divisions

cting Zone

atory Zone

Zone

Made up of rigid passageways that serve to warm, moisten, and filter the inhaled air: nose,
nasal cavity, pharynx, larynx, trachea, primary bronchi, tertiary bronchi, bronchioles, terminal
bronchioles.

Air passages undergo 23 orders of branching in the lungs which significantly increases cross
sectional area for flow

Zone

Site of gas exchange

Consists of respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, alveolar sacs, and about 300 million alveoli

Accounts for most of the lungs’ volume

Provide tremendous surface area for gas exchange

nsists of 4 distinct processes:

Pulmonary Ventilation

o moving air into and out of the lungs.

o diaphragm and intercostals muscles promote ventilation


External Respiration

o diffusion of gases between the alveoli and the blood of the pulmonary capillaries.

Transport

o transport of oxygen and carbon dioxide between the lungs and tissues

Internal Respiration

o diffusion of gases between the blood of the systemic capillaries and cells.

iew an animation that summarizes internal and external respiration.

is followed by practice questions.

ry Ventilation

an animation that summarizes the information that follows on pulmonary ventilation.

The physical movement of air into and out of the lungs

A mechanical process that depends on volume changes in the thoracic cavity

Volume changes lead to pressure changes, which lead to the flow of gases in and out of the thoracic cavity to equalize pressure

Includes inspiration and expiration

*Gases move from areas of high pressure to areas of low pressure


w

states that the relationship between the pressure and volume of gases is inversely proportional
at a constant temperature

of a gas in mm Hg
a gas in cubic millimeters

 as pressure decreases, volume increases

 as volume decreases, pressure increases

lume Changes

At rest the diaphragm is relaxed

As the diaphragm contracts, thoracic volume increases

As the diaphragm relaxes, thoracic volume decreases

elationships in the Thoracic Cavity

atory pressure is always described relative to atmospheric pressure

spheric pressure (ATM) - pressure exerted by all of the gases in the air we breathe (760 mm Hg at sea level)
Negative respiratory pressure is less than ATM
Positive respiratory pressure is greater than ATM

ulmonary pressure

pressure within the alveoli ~760mmHg (when even with ATM )

ntrapulmonary pressure always eventually equalizes itself with atmospheric pressure

eural pressure

pressure within the pleural cavity which adheres lungs to thoracic cavity ~ 756mmHg

intrapleural pressure is always less than intrapulmonary pressure and atmospheric pressure

ulmonary pressure and intrapleural pressure fluctuate with the phases of breathing
he thoracic wall and lungs in close apposition – stretching the lungs to fill the large thoracic cavity

eural fluid cohesiveness – polarity of water attracts wet surfaces

mural pressure gradient – pATM (760mmHg) is greater than intrapleural pressure (756mmHg) so lungs expand

 The diaphragm and external intercostal muscles (inspiratory muscles) contract and the rib cage rises, stretching the lungs an
intrapulmonary volume.

 Intrapulmonary pressure drops below atmospheric pressure (1 mm Hg) drawing air flow into the lungs, down its pressure gra
intrapleural pressure = atmospheric pressure
Inspiratory muscles relax and the rib cage descends due to gravity, elasticity.

Thoracic cavity volume decreases, elastic lungs recoil passively and intrapulmonary volume decreases.

Intrapulmonary pressure rises above atmospheric pressure (+1 mm Hg), gases flow out of the lungs down the pressure gradient unt
intrapulmonary pressure is 0

Cycle

Single cycle of inhalation and exhalation

Amount of air moved in one cycle = tidal volume


ctors Influencing Ventilation

 Is the major nonelastic source of resistance to airflow

 The relationship between flow (F), pressure (P), and resistance (R) is

Flow = ΔP /R

Is the ability to stretch, the ease with which lungs can be expanded due to change in transpulmonary pressure

Is determined by 2 main factors:

o Distensibility of the lung tissue and surrounding thoracic cage

o Surface tension of the alveol

High compliance - stretches easily

Low compliance - Requires more force

Restrictive lung diseases - fibrotic lung diseases and inadequate surfactant production

oil

Is how readily the lungs rebound after being stretched

Elasticity of connective tissue causes lungs to assume smallest possible size

Surface tension of alveolar fluid draws alveoli to their smallest possible siz

Is returning to its resting volume when stretching force is released

nsion
Is the attraction of liquid molecules to one another at a liquid-gas interface, the thin fluid layer between alveolar cells and the air

This liquid coating the alveolar surface is always acting to reduce the alveoli to the smallest possible size

Surfactant, a detergent-like complex secreted by Type II alveolar cells, reduces surface tension and helps keep the alveoli from col

stance

ow is inversely proportional to resistance with the greatest resistance being in the medium-sized
hi,

ely constricted or obstructed bronchioles: COPD


the Lungs

ysema--destruction of alveoli reduces surface area for gas exchange

ic lung disease--thickened alveolar membrane slows gas exchange, loss of lung compliance

nary edema--fluid in interstitial space increases diffusion distance

ma--increased airway restriction decreases airway ventilation

cities and Volumes

volume (TV) – air that moves into and out of the lungs with each breath (approximately 500 ml)

atory reserve volume (IRV) – air that can be inspired forcibly beyond the tidal volume (2100–3200 ml)

tory reserve volume (ERV) – air that can be evacuated from the lungs after a tidal expiration (1000–1200 ml)

ual volume (RV) – air left in the lungs after strenuous expiration (1200 ml)

atory capacity (IC) – total amount of air that can be inspired after a tidal expiration (IRV + TV)

onal residual capacity (FRC) – amount of air remaining in the lungs after a tidal expiration
ERV)

apacity (VC) – the total amount of exchangeable air (TV + IRV + ERV)

ung capacity (TLC) – sum of all lung volumes (approximately 6000 ml in males)

mical dead space – volume of the conducting respiratory passages (150 ml)

ar dead space – alveoli that cease to act in gas exchange due to collapse or obstruction
dead space – sum of alveolar and anatomical dead spaces

spiration: Pulmonary Gas Exchange

s influencing the movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide across the respiratory membrane

Partial pressure gradients and gas solubilities

Matching of alveolar ventilation and pulmonary blood perfusion

Structural characteristics of the respiratory membrane

an animation that reviews the structure of the alveoli and describes external respiration.
ties

w
re exerted by a mixture of gases is the sum of the pressures exerted independently by each gas in the mixture

The partial pressure of each gas is directly proportional to its percentage in the mixture

The partial pressure of oxygen (PO2)

o Air is 20.93% oxygen

o Total pressure of air = 760 mmHg

PO2 = 0.2093 x 760 = 159 mmHg

e of gases is in contact with a liquid, each gas will dissolve in the liquid in proportion to its partial pressure

The amount of gas that will dissolve in a liquid also depends upon its solubility

Various gases in air have different solubilities:

o Carbon dioxide is the most soluble

o Oxygen is 1/20th as soluble as carbon dioxide

o Nitrogen is practically insoluble in plasma

Gases

from high to low partial pressure


g and blood
od and tissue

law of diffusion:

= A x D x (P1-P2)

V gas = rate of diffusion

A = tissue area

T = tissue thickness

D = diffusion coefficient of gas

P1-P2 = difference in partial pressure


Membranes

nly 0.5 to 1 mm thick, allowing for efficient gas exchange

a total surface area (in males) of about 60 m2 (40 times that of one’s skin)

air-blood barrier is composed of alveolar and capillary walls

walls of the alveoli consist of three types of cells:

pe I (Alveolar) Cells

Are simple squamous epithelila cells that form a nearly continuous lining of the alveolar wall.

These are the predominant type of cells.

These are the main sites of gas exchange.

eptal) Cells

Are few in number and are found between type I alveolar cells

Are rounded or cuboidal epithelial cells whose free surfaces contain microvilli

These cells secrete alveolar fluid keeps the surface between the cells and the air moist

Part of the alveolar fluid is surfactant a mixture of phospholipids and lipoproteins that lowers the surface tension of the alveolar fluid
reduces the tendency of the alveoli to collapse

Macrophages (Dust Cells)

Are associated with the alveolar wall

Are wandering phagocytes that remove fine dust particles and other debris in the alveolar spaces. engulf foreign particl e

ere for an animation that reviews the structure of respiratory membranes. Review the first half of the animation.

n of Alveolar Gas

mosphere is mostly nitrogen ~79% & oxygen ~21%, only 0.03% is CO 2

contain more CO2 and water vapor

differences result from:


Gas exchanges in the lungs – oxygen diffuses from the alveoli and carbon dioxide diffuses into the alveoli

Humidification of air by conducting passages

The mixing of alveolar gas that occurs with each breath

on Dalton’s law, partial pressure of alveolar oxygen is 100mmHG and partial pressure of alveolar CO2 is 40mmHg

sure Gradients

artial pressure of oxygen (PO2) of venous blood is 40 mm Hg

O2 in the alveoli is ~100 mm Hg

gradient allows PO2 gradients to rapidly reach equilibrium (0.25sec)

can move quickly through the pulmonary capillary and still be adequately oxygenated

gh carbon dioxide has a lower partial pressure gradient 40 -> 46:

It is 20 times more soluble in plasma than oxygen

It diffuses in equal amounts with oxygen


spiration

ctors promoting gas exchange between systemic capillaries and tissue cells are the same
se acting in the lungs

The partial pressures and diffusion gradients are reversed

PO2 in tissue is always lower than in systemic arterial blood

PO2 of venous blood draining tissues is 40 mm Hg and PCO2is 45 mm Hg

an animation that reviews how internal respiration occurs.

Perfusion Coupling

tion – the amount of gas reaching the alveoli

ion – the blood flow reaching the alveoli

tion and perfusion must be tightly regulated for efficient gas exchange

es in PCO2 in the alveoli cause changes in the diameters of the pulmonary arterioles

Alveolar CO2 is high/O2 low: vasoconstriction

Alveolar CO2 is low/O2 high: vasodilation

t in the Blood

ds of transport:

Dissolved in plasma

Bound to hemoglobin (Hb) for transport in the blood


o Oxyhemoglobin: O2 bound to Hb (HbO2)

o Deoxyhemoglobin: O2 not bound to (HHb)

ng capacity

201 ml O2 /L blood in males

150 g Hb/L blood x 1.34 ml O2 / /g of Hb

174 ml O2 /L blood in females

130 g Hb/L blood x 1.34 mlO2/g of Hb

n (Hb)

ted hemoglobin – when all four hemes of the molecule are bound to oxygen

y saturated hemoglobin – when one to three hemes are bound to oxygen

hat hemoglobin binds and releases oxygen is regulated by:

PO2

Temperature

Blood pH

PCO2

[2,3 DPG] (an organic chemical)


n Saturation Curve
aturation plotted against PO2 produces a oxygen-hemoglobin dissociation curve:

mmHg, hemoglobin is 98% saturated

tion of hemoglobin is why hyperventilation has little effect on arterial O 2 levels

, hemoglobin is almost completely saturated at a PO2 of 70 mm Hg

r increases in PO2 produce only small increases in oxygen binding

n loading and delivery to tissue is still adequate when PO 2 is below normal levels

PO2 on Hemoglobin Saturation

aturated arterial blood contains 20 ml oxygen per 100 ml blood (20 vol %)

0–25% of bound oxygen is unloaded during one systemic circulation

erial blood flows through capillaries, 5 ml oxygen/dl are released

en levels in tissues drop:

More oxygen dissociates from hemoglobin and is used by cells

Respiratory rate or cardiac output need not increase


uencing Hb Saturation

erature

concentration

Increases of these factors decrease hemoglobin’s affinity for oxygen and enhance oxygen unloading from the blood

H+ and CO2 modify the structure of Hb - Bohr effect

DPG produced by RBC metabolism when environmental O2 levels are low

parameters are all high in systemic (tissue) capillaries where oxygen unloading is the goal

xide Transport

e is transported in the blood in three forms

Dissolved in plasma – 7 to 10%

Chemically bound to hemoglobin – 20% is carried in RBCs as carbaminohemoglobin

Bicarbonate ion in plasma – 70% is transported as bicarbonate (HCO3–)

nd Exchange of CO2
n dioxide diffuses into RBCs and combines with water to form carbonic acid (H 2CO3), which quickly dissociates into hydrogen ions an

Cs, carbonic anhydrase reversibly catalyzes the conversion of CO 2 and water to carbonic acid

nic acid–bicarbonate buffer system resists blood pH changes

increases, excess H+ is removed by combining with HCO 3–


e, carbonic acid dissociates, releasing H+

ift

bicarbonate quickly diffuses from RBCs into the plasma


ance the out rush of negative bicarbonate ions from the RBCs, chloride ions (Cl –) move from the plasma into the erythrocytes. This is
e shift.

lungs, these processes are reversed

Bicarbonate ions move into the RBCs and bind with hydrogen ions to form carbonic acid

Carbonic acid is then split by carbonic anhydrase to release carbon dioxide and water

Carbon dioxide then diffuses from the blood into the alveoli

fect

ving O2 from Hb increases the ability of Hb to pick up CO2 and CO2 generated H+ is called the Haldane effect.

aldane and Bohr effect work in synchrony to facilitate O2 liberation and uptake of CO2 and H+
tissues, as more CO2 enters the blood:

More oxygen dissociates from Hb (Bohr effect)

Unloading O2 allows more CO2 to combine with Hb (Haldane effect), and more bicarbonate ions are formed

tuation is reversed in pulmonary circulation

Respiration

ecific neurons called respiratory centerscontrol breathing. The centers located in the medulla
the rate and rhythm of normal breathing. The centers in the pons regulate the rate and depth of

espiratory Centers

Dorsal respiratory group (DRG), or inspiratory center:

o stimulates inhalations

o Inspiratory neurons

o Thought to set by basic rhythm “pacemaking” (now believed to be pre-Botzinger


complex)

o Excites the inspiratory muscles and sets eupnea(12-15 breaths/minute)

o Cease firing during expiration

Ventral respiratory group (VRG) or expiratory center

o Inspiratory & expiratory neurons

o Remains inactive during quite breathing

o Activity when demand is high

o Involved in forced inspiration and expiration

 Control via phrenic (to the diaphragm)


and intercostal(to the external intercostal
muscles) ner
ves

ratory Centers

modify activity of the medullary centers to smooth out inspiration and expiration transitions

Pneumotaxic center – this is the regulator; it coordinates the transition between inhalation
and exhalation; it also prevents overinflation of the lungs by always sending inhibitory
impulses to the inspiratory center (DRG)

Apneustic center also coordinates the transition between inhalation and exhalation by fine-
tuning the medullary respiratory centers; does this by sending stimulatory impulses to the
inspiratory center (DRG) which result in a slower, deeper inhalation; this is necessary when
you choose to hold your breath p

Pneumotaxic centerdominates to allow expiration to occur normally

Rate of Breathing

tory depth is determined by how actively the respiratory center stimulates the respiratory muscles

f respiration is determined by how long the inspiratory center is active

atory centers in the pons and medulla are sensitive to both excitatory and inhibitory stimuli

chemoreceptors and stretch reflexes modify pacemaker activity

nary irritant reflexes – irritants promote reflexive constriction of air passages

n reflex (Hering-Breuer) – stretch receptors in the lungs are stimulated by lung inflation

nflation, inhibitory signals are sent to the medullary inspiration center to end inhalation and allow expiration

halamic controls act through the limbic system to modify rate and depth of respiration

Example: breath holding that occurs in anger

n body temperature acts to increase respiratory rate

al controls are direct signals from the cerebral motor cortex that bypass medullary controls

Examples: voluntary breath holding, taking a deep breath


Rate of Breathing: PCO2

ing PCO2 levels are monitored by chemoreceptors of the brain stem

n dioxide in the blood diffuses into the cerebrospinal fluid where it is hydrated

ng carbonic acid dissociates, releasing hydrogen ions

evels rise (hypercapnia) resulting in increased depth and rate of breathing


ventilation – increased depth and rate of breathing that:

Quickly flushes carbon dioxide from the blood

Occurs in response to hypercapnia

h a rise CO2 acts as the original stimulus, control of breathing at rest is regulated by the hydrogen ion concentration in the brain

entilation – slow and shallow breathing due to abnormally low PCO2 levels

(breathing cessation) may occur until PCO2 levels rise

l oxygen levels are monitored by the aortic and carotid bodies

antial drops in arterial PO2 (to 60 mm Hg) are needed before oxygen levels become a major stimulus for increased ventilation

on dioxide is not removed (e.g., as in emphysema and chronic bronchitis), chemoreceptors become unresponsive to PCO 2 chemical

h cases, PO2 levels become the principal respiratory stimulus (hypoxic drive)

Rate of Breathing: Arterial pH

es in arterial pH can modify respiratory rate even if carbon dioxide and oxygen levels are normal

sed ventilation in response to falling pH is mediated by peripheral chemoreceptors

sis may reflect:

Carbon dioxide retention

Accumulation of lactic acid

Excess fatty acids in patients with diabetes mellitus

atory system controls will attempt to raise the pH by increasing respiratory rate and depth

Top ...... Main Page

This material is based upon work supported by the Nursing, Allied Health
and Other Health-related Educational Grant Program, a grant program
funded with proceeds of the State’s Tobacco Lawsuit Settlement and
administered by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board.

You might also like