Respiratory System Hangman

 
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Five functions of respiratory system  1)Gas exchange for cellular respiration 2)Sound production 3)assistance in abdominal compression during micturition, defecation, and parturition 4)route for water and heat loss 5)coughing and sneezing out inhaled foreign matter  
Internal respiration  process by which gases are exchanged between the blood and the cells  
External respiration  gas exchange between the air in the alveoli and blood  
Cellular respiration  cells use )2 for metabolism and give off CO2 as a waste product  
Bronchial tree  trachea>right and left primary bronchi>secondary bronchi>tertiary bronchi>bronchioles>terminal bronchioles>alveolar ducts>alveolar sacs  
Pulmonary alveoli  alveolar sacs are formed of many microscopic pulmonary alveoli  
How many pulmonary alveoli are there  300 million with 6 times the surface area of the body  
Type II alveolar cells secrete what and for what  secrete surfactant to lower the surface tension inside the alveolus  
What remove dust particles and other debris from the pulmonary alveolus?  alveolar macrophages  
External intercostals muscles  elevate during inspiration  
Internal intercostals muscles  contract during expiration  
Hypoxia  a deprivation of O2 in tissues and organs  
Eupnea  normal breathing  
Dyspnea  difficult or labored breathing  
Apnea  temporary cessation of respiration that may follow hyperventilation  
Cheyne-strokes  periods of dyspnea followed by periods of apnea (leads to death if not stopped)  
Respiration rate  12-15 times per minute  
O2 consumption  250 ml O2 per minute at rest  
Bronchoconstriction  decreased radius, and increased resistance to flow. Allergy induced spasm of the airways-maybe from histamine release or from parasympathetic stimulation  
Bronchodilation  increased radius, and decreased resistance to airflow. Sympathetic stimulation controlled through epinephrine and norepinephrine  
Asthma  a disease characterized by recurrent attacks of dyspnea. Often an allergic response to plants, animals, or food products resulting in contraction of the bronchial muscles  
Pneumonia  acute infection and inflammation of the lungs with exudation (accumulation of fluid)  
Chronic bronchitis  a long term inflammatory condition of the lower respiratory airways, generally triggered by frequent exposure to irritating cigarette smoke, polluted air, or allergens.  
Emphysema  collapse of the smaller airways and a breakdown of alveolar walls. Caused by excessive release of destruction enzymes such as trypsin from alveolar macrophages as a defense mechanism in response to chronic exposure to inhaled cigarette smoke or other irr  
TV  tidal volume-volume of air moved into or out of the lungs during normal breathing 400-500ml  
IRV  Inspiratory reserve volume-max volume beyond the tidal volume that can be inspired in one deep breath- 3000ml  
ERV  expiratory reserve volume-max volume beyond the tidal volume that can be forcefully exhaled following a normal expiration- 1100 ml  
RV  residual volume-air that remains in the lungs follwing a forceful expiration- 1200 ml  
MRV  minute respiratory volume-volume of air moved in normal ventilation in one minute- 6000ml/min  
AVV  alveolar ventilation volume-volume of air that actually ventilates the alveoli. A portion of inspired iar does not take part in gas exchange b/c it fills the air passageways (dead air). Dead air makes up about 30% of the tidal volume  
How much of the tidal volume does dead air contribute  30%  
TLC  total lung coapacity-sum of the four lung volumes TV+ERV+IRV+RV=TLV=5700ml  
VC  vital capacity- total amount of air that can be exchanged by the lungs- sum of the TV+IRV+ERV=4600 ml  
Spirogram  record of pulmonary volumes and capacities  
6 Layers of the respiratory membrane  1)surfactant 2)thin layer of fluid-water 3)alveolar epithelium 4)interstitial space 5)capillary basement membrane 6)capillary endothelium  
surfactant  phospholipid protein decreases the surface tenstion of the fluids lining the alveoli and respiratory passages (Hyaline membrane disease or Respiratory distress syndrome)  
Four factors affecting gaseous diffusion across the respiratory membrane  1)thickness of the respiratory membrane 2)surface area of the membrane 3)diffusion coefficient of each gas 4)pressure difference across the membrane  
Changes in the thickness of the respiratory membrane  edema in the lungs (left heart failure), pneumonia (edema in membrane and fluid in the lungs)  
Changes in surface area of the membrane  emphysema-decrease in overall surface area  
Changes in diffusion coefficient of each gas  O2 has a coefficient value of 1 (it’s the standard), CO2 has a coefficient of 20 (20 times more soluble than water)  
Changes in pressure difference across the membrane  Pressure in Alveolus (O2=104, CO2=40) in capillary (O2=40 and goes to 104, CO2=45 and goes to 40)  
Composition of atmospheric Air  N2=78.6, O2=20.8, CO2=0.04, H2O=0.5  
Composition of Alveolar air  N2=74.9, O2=13.6, CO2=5.3, H2O=6.2  
Composition of expired air  N2=74, O2=15.7, CO2=3.6, H2O=6.2  
Percent of O2 dissolved in blood  1-3%  
Percent of O2 carried by hemoglobin  97-99%  
What determines whether oxygen is bound or released from hemoglobin?  partial pressure of O2  
PO2 of O2 in atmospheric air  21% of 760 mmHg=160mmHg  
Alveolar PO2 and PCO2  PO2=104mmHg, PCO2=40mmHg at sea level  
Grams of Hb per 100 ml of blood  15 grams  
Ml of O2 per 1 gram of Hb  1.34ml  
Ml of O2 per 100 ml of blood  20ml  
Arterial blood is how saturated with O2  97%  
Venous blood is how saturated with O2  75%  
During exercise how saturated is arterial blood with O2  97%  
During exercise how saturated is venous blood with O2  25%  
the most important factor determing the % Hb saturation of O2 is what?  PO2 of the blood  
factors affecting the O2-Hb dissociation curve  pH, PCO2, temperature, and 2,3-DPG  
bohr effect  the O2-Hg dissociation curve shifting to the right from increased acidity, PCO2, temp, or 2,3-DPG  
three major ways CO2 is transported  dissolved in blood (7-8%), carried by Hg forming carbaminohemoglobin(23-25%), as bicorbonate ion (65-70%)  
two types of respiration control  neural and chemical  
basic rhythm of repiration is controlled by what  medullary respiratory center in the brain stem  
two subgroups in medullary respiratory center  dorsal and ventral  
two other repiratory control centers in the pons  apneustic and pneumotaxic  
dorsal respiratory group consits mainly of what  inspiratory neurons whose descending fibers stimulate inspiratory muscles. Serves as the major rhythm regulators  
the ventral respiratory group contains  both inspiratory and expiratory neurons, which are inactive during quiet breathing, but become active during periods in whcih demands on ventailation are increased  
pneumotaxic center functions  sends impulses to the dorsal neurons that help "switch off" the inspiratory neurons, thereby limiting hte duration of inspiration  
apneustic center function  prevents the inpiratory neurons from being switched off, thus providing an extra boost to the inspiratory drive  
herring-breuer reflex  triggered to prevent overinflation of the lungs. Stretch receptors in the lungs are activated by the stretching of the lungs at large tidal volumes  
two types of receptors in chemical control of respiration  peripheral and central  
peripheral chemoreceptors  located in the carotid bodies of the aortic bodies and are stimulated by decreased PO2 and increased H+ concentrations  
central chemoreceptors  located in the medulla and respond to changes in brain extracellular fluid levels of PCO2. Increased PCO2 stimulates respiration.