Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Human Biology- Respiratory system Name:______________________ Block:______ Chapter 47.3 – Respiratory System Activities Late Box _____ Absent on due date _____ Just late (60%) Assigned: 3/28 (R), 3/29 (W) Due: 4/3 (R), 4/4 (W) Use your textbook, Chapter 47-3 beginning on page 944, as you learn about the respiratory system through the following diagrams and activities. A. The Lungs and Passage of Air 1. Label those structures on the diagram below. 2. Number the following terms below fro 1-7 to show the correct order in which air/oxygen encounters them as it travels into the body. ___trachea ___alveoli ___bronchioles ___capillaries ___mouth/nose ___bronchi ___pharynx B. Determining Lung Capacity Health workers accurately measure lung capacity using an instrument called a spirometer. These measurements provide one source of information about the general health of the lungs. In this activity, we will use a wet spirometer (water is used to measure volume) to determine the tidal volume, expiratory reserve volume, inspiratory reserve volume, and vital capacity for members of our class. Vocabulary: Tidal volume: normal amount of air you inhale and exhale under normal conditions. Expiratory Reserve Volume: amount of air that can forcibly be exhaled AFTER exhaling normally. Inspiratory Reserve Volume: amount of air forcibly inhaled AFTER inhaling normally. Vital Capacity: maximum TOTAL amount of air a person can inhale and exhale. Procedures: 1. Follow the instructions given by your teacher at this station. Do NOT use this device without a teacher’s supervision. 2. Fill out the data table with the information measured for you or a member of your group. Data Table Measurement Trial 1 Volume Trial 2 Volume Average Volume Tidal Volume (liters) Expiratory Reserve Volume (liters) Inspiratory Reserve Volume (liters) Vital Capacity (liters) 1. Compare your results to other classmates. Why is there such a variation between results? 2. Why would the lung volume values be different for athletes? (How does their activity affect their lungs, and why?) 3. What are the respiratory benefits of exercise? 4. Explain gas exchange in the lungs. Why does oxygen move into the blood and carbon dioxide move out of the blood at the alveoli? (Hint: concentration gradient) 5. How is oxygen carried in the blood? How does it leave the blood? 6. How is carbon dioxide carried in the blood? How does it leave the blood? Explain thoroughly. 7. Explain how the diaphragm and ribs work to produce inspiration and expiration. 8. Polio is a disease that paralyzes muscles by affecting the nerves that make them move. Before the polio vaccine was developed, many people who had polio died because they could not breathe. Some of the survivors had to be placed in an “iron lung” that breathed for them. From what you know about the respiratory system, explain why people stricken with polio could no longer breathe on their own. C. Take a breath!! Objective: This activity attempts to simulate how difficult it is to breathe with a respiratory disease, such as emphysema or asthma. Materials: one coffee stirrer one watch or clock with second hand Procedures: 1. Obtain one coffee stirrer. 2. Put the straw in your mouth and breathe only through the straw for one full minute. 3. Watch the clock and note when breathing becomes difficult or uncomfortable. If breathing becomes too uncomfortable, remove the straw. 1. How did it feel to breathe with this apparatus? 2. At what time did your breathing become difficult or uncomfortable? 3. Which gas in your blood does the brain monitor in order to regulate breathing? 4. Emphysema is a degenerative lung disease caused from long term smoking. With emphysema, the alveoli lose their elasticity and eventually rupture. Why would this make breathing more difficult? D. Hold It!! Objective: In this activity, we will observe the effect(s) of hypoventilation and hyperventilation on the ability to hold your breath. Procedures: 1. Normal conditions: Take a normal breath and hold it in your lungs for as long as you feel comfortable. Have a partner note how long you held your breath under these “normal” conditions. Record your results. 2. Hypoventilation: Exhale normally, and have a partner time how long you can hold your breath under these conditions. Record your results. 3. Hyperventilation: Take 8-10 slow, deep, cleansing breaths. After your last deep breath, take a normal breath and hold it for as long as you feel comfortable. Again, have a partner monitor the time, and record your results. Data: Conditions Normal Elapsed Time Hypoventilation Hyperventilation 1. What do the prefixes hyper and hypo mean? 2. Under which condition(s) could you hold your breath the longest? Does this seem logical, and why? 3. Under which condition(s) could you hold your breath for the least amount of time? Does this seem logical, and why? 4. Why do athletes often train at high altitudes? (Recall that the air is thinner – what does this force them to do during respiration? What is the effect? How else do their bodies adapt? Research!) E. Look At This! Typical Pulmonary Cells Slide 1. Examine the prepared slide of human pulmonary cells under low power of the microscope. Change the position of the slide and continue your examination. 2. Switch to high power and focus clearly on the cells. Draw a pulmonary cell below. Emphysema Slide 1. Examine the prepared slide of human emphysema cells under low power of the microscope. Change the position of the slide and continue your examination. 2. Switch to high power and focus clearly on the cells. Draw an emphysema cells below. Normal Pulmonary Tissue Drawing Emphysema Lung Tissue Drawing 1. How do the cells differ between the two slides? 2. What respiratory structure is deformed in emphysema patients? 3. How does this affect their breathing capacity? F. Respiratory Vocabulary Alveolus/Alveoli Asthma Bicarbonate ion Bronchiole Bronchus Capillaries Cilia Diaphragm Diffusion Emphysema Epiglottis Expiration Expiratory Reserve Volume External Respiration Hemoglobin Hyperventilation Hypoventilation Inspiration Inspiratory Reserve Volume Internal (Cellular) Respiration Mucous Membranes Larynx Pharynx Pleural Membrane Pulmonary Pulmonary Arteries/Arterioles Pulmonary Veins/Venules Spirometer Tidal Volume Trachea Vital Capacity