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The Mechanics of Breathing

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Page 1: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

The Mechanics of Breathing

Page 2: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Breathing

•The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs

•Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region of lower pressure

•There are two muscular structures that control air pressure inside our lungs

Page 3: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Muscles involved in breathing:

Intercostal Muscles

Diaphragm

Page 4: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Intercostal Muscles

•Muscles associated with the ventral surface of the rib cage•These muscles are found between the ribs•There are two kinds

Page 5: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Intercostal Muscles

•Located in the inside of the ribcase

Internal Intercostal Muscles

•Located in the outside of the ribcase

External Intercostal Muscles

Page 6: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Intercostal Muscles

Page 7: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

X-Section of Intercostal Muscles

Page 8: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Diaphragm

•A muscle layer that separates

•the thoracic cavity (region of the lungs) from

•the abdominal cavity (region of the stomach and the liver)

Page 9: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Diaphragm

Found in all mammals

Prime function: to assist in the ventilation of the lungs

Works simultaneously with intercostal muscles

To produce breathing-related movements

Page 10: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

How breathing works

Inhalation vs. Exhalation

Lungs

Diaphragm

Diaphragm

Page 11: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Inhalation

•To inhale, the external intercostal muscles contract

•Intercostal muscles expand the rib cage, lifting it up and out

Page 12: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Inhalation•the diaphragm contracts and pulls

downward in the thoracic cavity•This increases the volume of the thoracic

cavity, causing the lungs to expand.•How?

Page 13: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

How Lungs Expand•The thoracic cavity is relatively airtight•An increase in its volume, produces a

decrease in air pressure within the cavity•This decrease in pressure draws the

flexible walls of the lungs outward into the thoracic cavity

•Therefore, the lungs expand

Page 14: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Inhalation•As a result of this expansion, the air

pressure within the lungs is lower than the air pressure in the external environment

•Recall: Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region of lower pressure

•Therefore, air enters thelungs

Page 15: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Exhalation•The diaphragm relaxes, returning to a

dome-shaped curve

Page 16: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Exhalation•To exhale, the external intercostal

muscles relax•But the internal intercostal muscles

contract to help pull the ribcage back to its original shape and position

Page 17: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

HOW BREATHING WORKS- Exhalation•These changes create a higher pressure

in the thoracic cavity•This causes the lungs

to shrink, which resultsin a higher pressurein the lungs

•Air then moves outthrough the trachea

Page 18: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Inhalation and Exhalation• Intercostal muscles

contract, lifting rib cage up and out

• Diaphragm contracts and pulls downward

• The lungs expand, air is sucked in

• Intercostal muscles relax• Diaphragm relaxes• The ribs fall downward

and inward • Diaphragm back into

dome shape, squeezing lungs and pushing air out

Page 19: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Exchange of Gases•Review Capillary network and gas

exchange

Page 20: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Composition of inspired and expired air under normal conditions

20.94% Oxygen0.04% Carbon Dioxide79.02% Nitrogen and Trace gases

16.49% Oxygen4.49% Carbon Dioxide79.02% Nitrogen and Trace gases

Page 21: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Lung Capacity

•The different volumes of air drawn in or pushed out by the lungs are distinguished

Page 22: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Tidal Volume

•The volume of air inhaled and exhaled in a normal breathing movement

Page 23: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Inspiratory Reserve Volume

•The additional volume of air that can be taken in, beyond a regular or tidal inhalation

Page 24: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Expiratory Reserve Volume

•The additional volume that can be forced out of the lungs, beyond a regular or tidal exhalation

Page 25: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Vital Capacity

•The total volume of gas that can be moved in or out of the lungs

•VC=Tidal volume+IRV+ERV

Page 26: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Residual Volume

•The amount of gas that remains in the lungs and the passageways of the respiratory system even after a full exhalation

•The residual volume never leaves the respiratory system

• If it did, the lungs and the respiratory passageways would collapse

• It has little value for gas exchange, because it is not exchanged with air from the external environment

Page 27: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Residual Volume

Page 28: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Respiratory Efficiency

•In mammals, the rate at which oxygen can be transferred into the blood stream for transport to the rest of the body

•There are factors that affect the respiratory efficiency

•Other animals have respiratory systems with special adaptations to help increase respiratory efficiency

•One adaptation is facilitated diffusion

Page 29: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

The Respiratory System in Fish

•The gills of fish utilize counter-current flow•A very effective mechanism for removing the

maximum amount of oxygen from the water flowing over them

Page 30: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Gills & Gas Exchange: Counter-current Flow

•During counter-current flow, two types of fluids (blood and water) with different concentrations flow in opposite directions past one another

Oxygenated blood

Deoxygenated Blood

Page 31: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow

•These two fluids (water and blood) are separated by thin membranes

Page 32: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow•Fish gills consist of a

series of filaments supported by bony gill arches

•Each filament is covered with thin folds of tissue called lamella

•Blood flows across each lamella within a dense network of capillaries

Filament

Gill arch

Gill arch

Filament

Lamellae

High O2

Low O2

Page 33: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow•Water is deflected over

the lamellae in a direction opposite the flow of blood in the capillaries

•Thus, the most highly oxygenated blood is brought close to the water that is just entering the gills and that has an even higher oxygen content than blood

Low Oxygen

Low Oxygen

High Oxygen

High Oxygen

Water flow

Blood flow

Vein-Oxygen poor blood

Artery-Oxygen rich blood

Page 34: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow

•As the water flows over the lamellae, gradually losing its oxygen to the blood, it encounters blood that is also increasingly low in oxygen

• In this way, the gradient encouraging oxygen to move from the water into the blood is maintained across all the lamellae.

Low Oxygen

Low Oxygen

High Oxygen

High Oxygen

Water flow

Blood flow

Vein-Oxygen poor blood

Artery-Oxygen rich blood

Page 35: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow

Low Oxygen

Low Oxygen

High Oxygen

High Oxygen

Water flow

Blood flow

Vein-Oxygen poor blood

Artery-Oxygen rich blood

Page 36: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Current vs. Counter-current Flow

Page 37: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Counter-current Flow

•Within each lamella, Counter-current flow enhances diffusion by maintaining a concentration gradient of oxygen between the water (relatively high in oxygen) and the blood (lower in oxygen)

•Countercurrent flow is so effective that some fish extract 85% of the oxygen from the water that flows over their gills.

Page 38: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Gas Exchange in Mammals

• In the mammalian lung, the oxygen gradient between the respiratory medium in the lungs and the blood in the capillaries is steadily reduced as oxygen passes across the alveoli wall

•The blood may take up about 50% of the oxygen in the respiratory medium entering the lungs

Page 39: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Gas Exchange in Fish

•In a countercurrent exchange system, the oxygen gradient is maintained over the whole of the gill

•The blood may take up as much as 80% of the oxygen carried in the respiratory medium entering the gill

Page 40: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

The Respiratory System in Birds•Respiration in

birds is much different than in mammals.

•Birds do not have a diaphragm; instead, air is moved in and out of the respiratory system through pressure changes in the air sacs

Page 41: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Avian Respiratory System•Inhalation:•When the bird breathes in, the air

sacs expand•Most of the inhaled air passes into

the posterior air sacs•Some flow from there into the lungs•At the same time, the air

that was in the lungsmoves into the anteriorair sacs

Posterior air sacs

Anterior air sacs

Anterior air sacs

Lungs

Page 42: The Mechanics of Breathing. Breathing The mechanism by which mammals ventilate their lungs Air will flow from a region of higher pressure to a region

Avian Respiratory System•Exhalation:•When the bird exhales, all the air

sacs contract, forcing the air in theposterior air sacs into the capillary-lined tubes of the lungs

•Gas exchange takes place in the lungs

•Then, the air from the anterior air sacsis forced out throughthe trachea

Posterior air sacs

Anterior air sacs

Anterior air sacs

Lungs