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While you are reading this paragraph, you will inhale and exhale four to five times without you even realizing that it is happening. Important Terms Vocabulary Disease or problems • • • • • • • • • • • Respiration Diaphragm Pharynx Trachea Bronchi Larynx Bronchitis Pneumonia Asthma Tuberculosis Sinusitis Main Function • Respiration: Exchange of gases between the body and the environment. • Process of Respiration is divided into two divisions: 1.External Respiration2.Internal Respiration* Having both of these work is essential for survival. External Respiration • Exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide that takes place in the lungs. • Oxygen moves from the lungs into the blood, and carbon dioxide moves from the blood into the lungs. • Alveoli- tiny air sacs through which the gas exchange of external respiration takes place. Internal Respiration • Exchange of gases between blood and body cells. • Oxygen moves from the blood into the cells, and carbon dioxide moves from the cells to the blood. The Structure Consist of: *Lungs and other passageways through which air travels •Nose and throat make up the upper respiratory system. •* The lower containslarynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs • Principle organ and the site of external respiration. • Diaphragm- is the muscle that separates the chest from the abdominal cavity. • Lungs get there power from the diaphragm. • Everyday the lungs take in enough air to fill a large room. • Alveoli- tiny air sacs - Bring in new oxygen from your air you’ve breathed to your bloodstream - Exchange it for waste products like carbon dioxide. Lungs **** Some people think the lungs are just big hollow bags, but in fact they are more like sponges. This increases the amount of area inside the lungs that the blood can meet with the air. ***Do you know that the surface area inside your lungs is big enough to cover the floor of your classroom? That's how much area your lungs need to get all of the oxygen into your body! ** How do we Breathe? Made possible by creating a pressure difference between the lungs and the outside of . the body • First the air is taken into our bodies through the mouth and nose. • Receptors attach to the alveoli creating a nerve impulse. • When the ribs pull up and the diaphragm pulls down air is taken in. • When the ribs pull down and the diaphragm pulls up, air goes out. • We are breathing! Clean up Crew • To work properly, your lungs have to be clean. Unfortunately, the air you breathe is not always that clean. That's why your lungs have a cleaning system. Dirt, germs, and other stuff get caught in the mucus that lines your nose, trachea and lungs. • ***Next, little hairs called cilia act like tiny brooms to push the dirty mucus out of your lungs and into your throat. The cilia help prevent your lungs from getting sick from germs floating around in the air. Demonstration To show how our lungs work when we breathe. Materials: 2 Liter bottle Balloon Respiratory Olympics Contest for the Lungs • Rules1.Four people in your group 2.Each person must participate and do only one of the contests. 3.No cheating or messing around with anyone else or there supplies. 4.Must keep track of scores on own sheet. The Contest: Must blow through a straw and produce bubbles in the liquid. Once you stop or take a breath, your time will stop. Record your score on your sheet. Longest time- 15 points Runner up- 10 points Third- 5 Participate- 2 • Pick the person who wants to participate. • Participant needs to sit in the front desk. • Everyone must remain seated during the competition. If feeling dizzy or sick you must stop. Mrs. Neves has the right to stop participant anytime. Who can Blow the Biggest Bubble? • One piece of Dubble bubble gum. • Pick your person • 3 chances to blow the biggest bubble the fastest. • Come up to the front of the class • Time is up when 3 minutes hits the clock and then it is over. • Record on your sheet- • • • • lst: 15 Points 2nd : 10 Points 3rd: 5 points Participated: 2 points • When I say start, unwrap the gum and start to chew. • Points deducted if gum wrapper or gum is found on the floor. • Blow up a balloon and tie it. • When I say go you throw it in the air and keep the balloon from touching the ground. • Use the air you have in your lungs. • Once your balloon falls sit back down in the front seat. • Last person and balloon standing wins. • 1st : 15 points • 2nd : 10 points • 3rd: 5 points • Participates: 2 points • Record on sheet • Last person has to do this one • No using hands or any other body part to keep it from falling • Spread out so that you can have room to move. • No helping from other teammates. Who Can Go the Distance? • Only using two breathes blow the little balloon as far as you can. • • • • • 1st : 15 points 2nd : 10 points 3rd: 5 points Participates: 2 points Record on sheet Pathway of where our air goes In our body and out Nose NOSE • Enters your body. • Lined with cilia and cells that produce mucus. • Cilia and mucus trap foreign objects and remove them. • Air is warmed and moistened. • MOUTH: Air exits Next….. • Pharynx- or throat • Trachea- or windpipecovered with cilia • Branches into 2 tubes called Bronchi- airways that connect the trachea and the lungs. Larynx and Epiglottis LARYNX EPIGLOTTIS • Voice box • Connects the throat and the trachea • Contains the vocal cords- Two bands of tissue that produces sound when air forced between them causes them to vibrate. • Flap of cartilage located above the larynx. • Folds down to close off the entrance to the larynx and the trachea. • When you swallow it keeps food and drink from entering the respiratory system. Food going down the “Wrong pipe” • Two pipes in your body - Trachea: Breathing - Esophagus: Food • When you eat to quickly or laugh while eating • The cough reflex is then stimulated in an attempt to get out the food Hiccups • Occur as a result of the diaphragm contracting in a spasm, quickly followed by the closure of the vocal cords. • This closure produces the sound of a hiccup. • Cause is unknown • Charles Osborne: 68 years with hiccups • 1922-1990 • In the Guinness World Record Book for man with the longest attack of the hiccups. • Triggers: • Emotional stress or excitement • Stretching of the stomach : may occur after overeating, drinking carbonated beverages, or swallowing air • Abrupt changes in the temperature (as with drinking a hot beverage) • Alcohol binging • Smoking Sneezing • Expulsion of air from the lung, most commonly caused by foreign particles irritating the nasal mucosa. • Sneezing can further be triggered through sudden expose to bright light, a particularly full stomach, or as a result of unexpected climatic variations. • Sneezing means different things in different countries-Japan ( something good is being said about you) Yawning • When you yawn you inhale, the air taken in is filling your lungs. Your abdominal muscles flex and you diaphragm is pushed down. • The air you breathe in expands the lungs to capacity and then some of the air blows back out. • Cool facts: • The average yawn lasts about 6 seconds • Your heart rate can rise as much as 30 % during a yawn • 55% of people will yawn within five minutes of seeing someone else yawn. • Reading about yawning will make you yawn. • Olympic athletes often yawn before competition. Respiratory System Problems And how to take care of it. Respiratory Problems • Range from mild infections to disorders that can damage lung tissue or interfere with respiration. • Colds and influenza are common infections of the upper respiratory system. • Other infections and disorders affect the lower respiratory tract. Bronchitis Inflammation of the bronchi caused by infection or exposure to irritants Membranes that line the bronchi produce excessive mucus in the airways. Decreased airway diameter leads to symptoms such as -Coughing -Wheezing -Shortness of breath that worsens with physical activity. -Treatment- Medication that dilates the bronchial passage, -Chronic Bronchitis: more serious form and is often caused by smoking . Pneumonia • Inflammation of the lungs commonly caused by a bacterial or viral infection. • Common type- the alveoli swell and become clogged with mucus, decreasing the amount of gas exchange. • Symptoms: • - Cough -Fever -chills • - chest pain • Treatment- antibiotics Asthma • Trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles become narrowed , causing difficulty in breathing. • Asthma attacks-involuntary contraction of smooth airway muscles that leads to whizzing, chest tightness, and hard time breathing. • Acute- use a inhaler • Long-term treatment is medication that reduces inflammation and avoiding triggers. Sinusitis *Inflammation of the tissues that line the sinuses, air-filled cavities above the cavities above the nasal passages and throat. Symptoms include: -Nasal congestion --Headache -Fever -Treatment includes: --Nasal decongestant drops or sprays -- antibiotics Tuberculosis • Contagious bacterial that usually affects the lungs. • Immune system surrounds the infected area and isolates it. • - symptoms do not appear. • Immune system is weakened by illness or advancing age then infection can become active. • Symptoms• -Cough, fever, fatigue, weight loss. • Treatment- Hospitalized, antibiotics.