five functions of the respiratory system

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pyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Five Functions of the Respiratory System 1. Provides extensive gas exchange surface area between air and circulating blood 2. Moves air to and from exchange surfaces of lungs 3. Protects respiratory surfaces from outside environment 4. Produces sounds 5. Participates in olfactory sense

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Five Functions of the Respiratory System. Provides extensive gas exchange surface area between air and circulating blood Moves air to and from exchange surfaces of lungs Protects respiratory surfaces from outside environment Produces sounds Participates in olfactory sense. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Five Functions of the Respiratory System

1. Provides extensive gas exchange surface area

between air and circulating blood

2. Moves air to and from exchange surfaces of lungs

3. Protects respiratory surfaces from outside

environment

4. Produces sounds

5. Participates in olfactory sense

Page 2: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Major Functions of the Respiratory System

• To supply the body with oxygen and dispose of carbon dioxide

• Respiration – four distinct processes must happen

• Pulmonary ventilation (breathing):movement of air into and outof the lungs

• External respiration: O2 and CO2

exchange between the lungsand the blood

• Transport: O2 and CO2

in the blood

• Internal respiration: O2 and CO2

exchange between systemic bloodvessels and tissues

Respiratorysystem

Circulatorysystem

Page 3: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory System – conducting and respiratory zone

• Consists of the respiratory and conducting zones

• Respiratory zone:

• Site of gas exchange

• Consists of respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, and alveoli

• Conducting zone:

• Conduits for air to reach the sites of gas exchange

• Includes all other respiratory structures (e.g., nose, nasal cavity, pharynx, trachea)

• Respiratory muscles – diaphragm and other muscles that promote ventilation

Page 4: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory System – conducting and respiratory zone

• Conducting passageways carrying air to and from the alveoli

• Upper respiratory passages filter and humidify incoming air

• Lower passageways include delicate conduction passages and alveolar exchange surfaces

• The conducting passageways of the respiratory system (nasal cavity, trachea, bronchi and bronchioles) are lined by ciliated pseudostratified columnar ET, which includes mucus-secreting goblet cells.  

• Because the passage of air depends on wide open passageways, the larger respiratory passages (trachea and bronchi) are supported by rings of cartilage.  

• The respiratory regions are lined with simple squamous ET

Page 5: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Function of the Nose

• The only externally visible part of the respiratory system that functions by:

• Providing an airway for respiration

• Moistening and warming the entering air

• Filtering inspired air and cleaning it of foreign matter

• Serving as a resonating chamber for speech

• Housing the olfactory receptors

Page 6: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Paranasal Sinuses

• Sinuses in bones that surround the nasal cavity

• Sinuses lighten the skull and help to warm and moisten the air

http://sinusitis.upmc.com/Images/Sub/PhotoSinusitis.jpg

Page 7: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Larynx (Voice Box)

• Attaches to the hyoid bone and opens into the laryngopharynx superiorly

• Continuous with the trachea posteriorly

• The functions of the larynx are:

• Air passage

• To act as a switching mechanism to route air and food into the proper channels

• To function in voice production

Page 8: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Framework of the Larynx

• Cartilages (hyaline) of the larynx

• Shield-shaped anterosuperior thyroid cartilage with a midline laryngeal prominence (Adam’s apple)

• Signet ring–shaped anteroinferior cricoid cartilage

• Three pairs of small arytenoid, cuneiform, and corniculate cartilages

• Epiglottis – elastic cartilage that covers the laryngeal inlet during swallowing

• Glottis is the superior opening of the larynx. It is guarded by the epiglottis (cartilage)

Page 9: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Vocal Ligaments

• Attach the arytenoid cartilages to the thyroid cartilage

• Composed of elastic fibers that form mucosal folds called true vocal cords

• The medial opening between them is the glottis

• They vibrate to produce sound as air rushes up from the lungs

• False vocal cords

• Mucosal folds superior to the true vocal cords

• Have no part in sound production

Page 10: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Voice Production

• Speech: release of expired air while opening and closing the glottis

• Pitch is determined by the length and tension of the vocal cords

• Loudness depends upon the force of air

• Chambers of pharynx, oral, nasal, and sinus cavities amplify and enhance sound quality

• Sound is “shaped” into language by muscles of the pharynx, tongue, soft palate, and lips

Page 11: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Trachea

• Flexible and mobile tube extending from the larynx into the mediastinum

• Composed of three layers

• Mucosa – ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium with goblet cells

• Submucosa – connective tissue with mucous glands, lymph nodes

• Adventitia – fibrous CT that contains C-shaped rings of hyaline cartilage

Page 12: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• Trachea branches in the mediastinum into right and left primary bronchi

• Bronchi enter the lungs at the hilus

• Have C-shaped cartilaginous supporting rings

The primary bronchi

Page 13: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• System of tubes formed from the primary bronchi and their branches

• Primary bronchi branch into secondary or lobar bronchi

• Secondary bronchus goes to each lobe of the lungs

• Secondary bronchi branch into tertiary (segmental) bronchi

• Both secondary and tertiary bronchi are covered by overlapping plates of cartilage and not rings

• Cartilage in walls decrease and smooth muscle increase with branching

The bronchial tree

Page 14: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.Figure 23.10a

The Bronchi and Lobules of the Lung

Page 15: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• Branching of the bronchi that are 1 mm or less in diameter and lack cartilage. Bronchioles are surrounded by smooth muscle that allows the change of diameter.

• Ultimately bronchioles branch into the final branch of the conducting division - terminal bronchioles with a diameter of 0.3-0.5 mm

• Terminal bronchiole becomes respiratory bronchioles – the beginning of the respiratory division

The bronchioles

Page 16: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory Zone

• Defined by the presence of alveoli; begins as terminal bronchioles feed into respiratory bronchioles

• Respiratory bronchioles lead to alveolar ducts, then to terminal clusters of alveolar sacs composed of alveoli

• Approximately 300 million alveoli:

• Account for most of the lungs’ volume

• Provide tremendous surface area for gas exchange

Page 17: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory Membrane

• This air-blood barrier is composed of:

• Alveolar and capillary walls

• Their fused basal laminas

• Simple squamous ET (type I) – most of the cells in the alveolus wall and are part of the respiratory membrane (allow gas exchange)

• Septal cells (type II ) – about 5% of the alveolar wall. The septal cells secret surfactant – a lipoprotein secretion that reduces the surface tension in the alveolus

• Alveolar Macrophage (dust cells) - patrol epithelium and engulf foreign particles

Page 18: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Pleurae

• Thin, double-layered serosa

• Parietal pleura

• Covers the thoracic wall and superior face of the diaphragm

• Continues around heart and between lungs

• Visceral, or pulmonary, pleura

• Covers the external lung surface

• Divides the thoracic cavity into three chambers

• The central mediastinum

• Two lateral compartments, each containing a lung

Page 19: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Breathing or pulmonary ventilation

• 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 to equalize pressure

• Consists of two phases

• Inspiration – air flows into the lungs

• Expiration – gases exit the lungs

Page 20: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Pressure Relationships in the Thoracic Cavity

• Respiratory pressure is always described relative to atmospheric pressure

• Atmospheric pressure (Patm)

• Pressure exerted by the air surrounding the body

• Negative respiratory pressure is less than Patm

• Positive respiratory pressure is greater than Patm

• Intrapleural pressure (Pip) – pressure within the pleural cavity

• always less than intrapulmonary pressure and atmospheric pressure

• Intrapulmonary pressure (Ppul) – pressure within the alveoli

• eventually equalizes itself with atmospheric pressure

Page 21: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Intrapleural Pressure and Pressure Relationships

• Negative Pip is caused by opposing forces

• Two inward forces promote lung collapse

• Elastic recoil of lungs decreases lung size

• Surface tension of alveolar fluid reduces alveolar size

• One outward force tends to enlarge the lungs

• Elasticity of the chest wall pulls the thorax outward

• If Pip = Ppul the lungs collapse

• (Ppul – Pip) = transpulmonary pressure

• Keeps the airways open

Page 22: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Intrapleural pressure

• As a result of the relationship between the lungs and the pleurae (lungs pull the visceral pleura in), the intrapleural pressure is below atmospheric pressure – average of -4 mmHg

• This pressure (or the fluid bond between the pleurae) prevents the collapsing of the lungs due to there elasticity

Page 23: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Pulmonary ventilation – inspiration and expiration

• Pulmonary ventilation depends on volume changes in the thoracic cavity

• Volume changes lead to pressure changes

• Pressure changes lead to flow of gases

• Boyle’s Law - The volume of a fixed amount of gas is inversely proportional to the total amount of pressure applied.

• If the pressure doubles, the volume shrinks to half.

• In the lungs – if lungs volume increase the pressure decreases (intrapulmonary pressure)

Page 24: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Modes of breathing

• Quiet breathing – eupnea

• Inhalation is active and exhalation is passive (relaxation of muscles)

• Forced breathing – hyperpnea

• Both inhalation and exhalation involve muscle contraction – both active

• Inhalation involve muscles like the pec. minor, sternocleidomastoid and more

• Exhalation involves the internal intercostals and abdominal muscles among others

Page 25: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Physical Factors Influencing Ventilation

• 3 factors influence pulmonary ventilation

• Airway Resistance

• Alveolar Surface Tension

• Lung Compliance

Page 26: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Airway Resistance• As airway resistance rises, breathing movements become more

difficult

• Resistance is usually insignificant because of

• Large airway diameters in the first part of the conducting zone

• Progressive branching of airways as they get smaller, increasing the total cross-sectional area

• Severely constricted or obstructed bronchioles:

• Can prevent life-sustaining ventilation

• Can occur during acute asthma attacks which stops ventilation

• Epinephrine release via the sympathetic nervous system dilates bronchioles and reduces air resistance

Page 27: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Alveolar Surface Tension

• Surface tension – the attraction of liquid molecules to one another at a liquid-gas interface

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

• Surfactant, a detergent-like complex, reduces surface tension and helps keep the alveoli from collapsing

• Normally, surfactant synthesis starts at about the 25th week of fetal development and production reaches optimal levels at 34th week

• Premature babies with insufficient surfactant can be treat with aerosol administration with artificial surfactant until lungs mature

Page 28: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Lung Compliance

• Compliance is the indication of the lungs expandability

• The ease with which lungs can be expanded

• Factors that diminish lung compliance

• Scar tissue or fibrosis that reduces the natural elasticity of the lungs

• Blockage of the smaller respiratory passages with mucus or fluid

• Reduced production of surfactant

• The mobility of the thoracic cage – changes cause to the articulations of the ribs or to the muscles involved.

Page 29: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory Volumes

• Used to assess a person’s respiratory status

• Tidal volume (TV)

• Inspiratory reserve volume (IRV)

• Expiratory reserve volume (ERV)

• Residual volume (RV)

Page 30: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 22.16b

Respiratoryvolumes

Tidal volume (TV) Amount of air inhaled or exhaled with each breath under resting conditions

3100 ml Inspiratory reservevolume (IRV)

Expiratory reservevolume (ERV)

Residual volume (RV) Amount of air remaining in the lungs after a forced exhalation

500 ml

Amount of air that can be forcefully inhaled after a nor-mal tidal volume inhalation

Amount of air that can beforcefully exhaled after a nor-mal tidal volume exhalation

1200 ml

1200 ml

Measurement DescriptionAdult maleaverage value

1900 ml

500 ml

700 ml

1100 ml

Adult femaleaverage value

Page 31: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Respiratory Capacities• Inspiratory capacity (IC) equals TV plus IRV

• Maximum amount of air (about 3.5 liters) a person can breath in

• Functional residual capacity (FRC) equals the ERV plus RV

• Amount of air remains in the lungs at the end of normal expiration

• Vital capacity (VC) equals IRV+ERV+TV

• Maximum amount of air a person can expel from the lungs after filling with inspiratory capacity

• Total lung capacity (TLC) equals VC+RV

• Maximum volume to which the lungs can be expanded

Page 32: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Figure 22.16b

Respiratorycapacities

(b) Summary of respiratory volumes and capacities for males and females

Functional residualcapacity (FRC)

Volume of air remaining in the lungs after a normal tidal volume expiration: FRC = ERV + RV

Maximum amount of air contained in lungs after a maximum inspiratory effort: TLC = TV + IRV + ERV + RVMaximum amount of air that can be expired after a maxi-mum inspiratory effort: VC = TV + IRV + ERVMaximum amount of air that can be inspired after a normal expiration: IC = TV + IRV

Total lung capacity (TLC)

Vital capacity (VC)

Inspiratory capacity (IC)

6000 ml

4800 ml

3600 ml

2400 ml

4200 ml

3100 ml

2400 ml

1800 ml

Page 33: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Dead Space

• Some of the inspired air does not contribute to the gas exchange in the alveoli

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

• Alveolar dead space – alveoli that cease to act in gas exchange due to collapse or obstruction

• Total dead space – sum of alveolar and anatomical dead spaces

• On expiration, the air in the anatomical dead space is expired first

Page 34: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Pulmonary Function Tests

• Spirometer – an instrument used to evaluate respiratory function

• Spirometry can distinguish between:

• Obstructive pulmonary disease – increased airway resistance by narrowing or blocking airways (ex. Asthma)

• Restrictive disorders – reduction of pulmonary compliance thus limiting inflation of lungs.

• Caused by any disease that produces pulmonary fibrosis

Page 35: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Nonrespiratory Air Movements

• Most result from reflex action

• Examples include: coughing, sneezing, crying, laughing, hiccupping, and yawning

Page 36: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Gas exchange and transport

Page 37: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• External respiration

• Exchange of gases between blood and the external environment

• Internal respiration

• Exchange of gases between blood and interstitial fluid

• Transport of oxygen and carbon dioxide

• To understand the above processes, first consider

• Physical properties of gases

• Composition of alveolar gas

Respiratory physiology is a series of integrated processes

Page 38: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Basic properties of gases

• Dalton’s Law of Partial Pressures

• Total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is the sum of the pressures exerted independently by each gas in the mixture (as if no other gases were present)

• The separate contribution of each gas in a mixture is called partial pressure (symbolized with P)

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

Page 39: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Table 22.4

Page 40: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Composition of air in alveoli

• The composition of air we breath is not the composition in the alveoli:

• The air is humidified by the contact with the mucus membrane – so PH2O is >10 times higher than the inhaled air

• Freshly inspired air is mixed with residual air left from previous breathing cycle

• That causes the oxygen to be diluted and CO2 to be higher

• Alveolar gas exchanges O2 and CO2 with blood

• As a result, PO2 of alveolar air is about 65% of that of the inhaled air and PCO2 is >130 higher

Page 41: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

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

• The greater the concentration of a particular gas, the more and the faster that it will go into a solution

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

• Carbon dioxide is the most soluble

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

• Nitrogen is practically insoluble in plasma

Alveolar gas exchange Diffusion between liquid and gases (Henry’s law)

Page 42: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

External Respiration: Pulmonary Gas Exchange

• Factors influencing the movement of oxygen and carbon dioxide across the respiratory membrane (what is the respiratory membrane?)

• Partial pressure gradients and gas solubility

• Matching of alveolar ventilation and pulmonary blood perfusion

• Structural characteristics of the respiratory membrane

Page 43: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Partial Pressure Gradients and Gas Solubility

• The partial pressure oxygen (PO2) of venous blood is 40

mm Hg; the partial pressure in the alveoli is 104 mm Hg

• This steep gradient allows oxygen partial pressures to rapidly reach equilibrium (in 0.25 seconds)

• this is one third of the time a RBC is in the pulmonary capillary (0.75 seconds)

• Although carbon dioxide has a lower partial pressure gradient (45 mm Hg in the blood and 40 mm Hg in the alveoli; a gradient of 5 mm Hg):

• It diffuses in equal amounts with oxygen because it is 20 times more soluble in plasma than oxygen

Page 44: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Surface Area and Thickness of the Respiratory Membrane

• The amount of gas that moves across a tissue is

• proportional to the area of the sheet

• inversely proportional to its thickness

• Respiratory membranes:

• Are only 0.5 to 1 m thick, allowing for efficient gas exchange

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

Page 45: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Internal Respiration

• The factors promoting gas exchange between systemic capillaries and tissue cells are the same as those 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 PCO2 is 45 mm Hg

Page 46: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

• Molecular oxygen is carried in the blood:

• Bound to hemoglobin (Hb) within red blood cells

• Dissolved in plasma (O2 has low solubility in water and only 1.5% is dissolved in plasma)

• Each Hb molecule binds four oxygen atoms in a rapid and reversible process

• The hemoglobin-oxygen combination is called oxyhemoglobin (HbO2)

• Hemoglobin that has released oxygen is called reduced hemoglobin/deoxyhemoglobin (HHb)

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

• Partially saturated hemoglobin – when one to three hemes are bound to oxygen

Oxygen Transport: Role of Hemoglobin

Page 47: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

The Oxygen-Hemoglobin Saturation Curve

PO2 of 40 mm Hg – (average in the tissues) Hb is 75% saturated

only 25% of the O2 is unload from Hb in resting conditions

PO2 of 60-70 mm Hg – Hb is 90% saturated

PO2 of 20 mm Hg – Hb is only 30% saturated

Ex. – active muscle; relatively high percentage of O2 released with small decrease in Po2

Page 48: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Factors That Increase Release of Oxygen by Hemoglobin

• As cells metabolize glucose, carbon dioxide is released into the blood causing:

• Increases in PCO2 and H+ concentration in capillary blood

• Declining pH (acidosis), which weakens the hemoglobin-oxygen bond (Bohr effect)

• Metabolizing cells have heat as a byproduct and the rise in temperature increases BPG synthesis

• All these factors ensure oxygen unloading in the vicinity of working tissue cells

Page 49: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Carbon Dioxide Transport

• Carbon dioxide 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

–)

Page 50: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Carbon Dioxide Transport

• In areas with high PCO2, carbon dioxide leaves the cell, diffuses through the interstitial fluid and enters a capillary.

• Most of it enters an erythrocyte that contains an enzyme, carbonic anhydrase which catalyses the following reaction:

• CO2  + H20  -----> H2CO3 -----> H+  + HCO3-- .

• The bicarbonate ion leaves the red blood cell (against concentration gradient) and travels to the lungs in the plasma of the blood.

• In exchange, Cl- moves from plasma into RBCs to maintain the electrical balance between plasma and RBC (chloride shift)

• It often combines with Na+ present in the plasma to form sodium bicarbonate which plays a role in maintaining the homeostasis of blood pH.

Page 51: Five Functions of the Respiratory System

Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc.

Haldane Effect

• The amount of CO2 that can be transported in the blood is influenced by Hb saturation with O2.

• The lower the amount of Hb-O2 the higher the CO2 carrying capacity (Haldane effect):

• Deoxyhemoglobin has higher affinity to CO2

• Deoxyhemoglobin buffers more H+ thus promoting conversion of CO2 to HCO3

-

• At the tissues, as more carbon dioxide enters the blood:

• More oxygen dissociates from hemoglobin (acidosis - Bohr effect)

• More carbon dioxide combines with hemoglobin, and more bicarbonate ions are formed

• This situation is reversed in pulmonary circulation