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The Respiratory System Pulmonary Anatomy and Physiology Chapter 15: 393-423 What is Respiration? Closely Matched to Activity Includes: Breathing: Moving air into lungs Gas Exchange: Between lungs and blood Gas Transport: By the blood Gas Exchange: Between blood and tissues Cellular Respiration: O2 use Pulmonary Overview: Structure and Function Mechanics of Breathing Lung Volumes and Capacities Gas Exchange Gas Laws: Partial Pressures O2, CO2, and pH Homeostasis Control of Ventilation Special Issues: Exercise/Disease The Lungs and Homeostasis! The primary effector in Maintaining constant blood gases: O2 CO2 pH (H+ and HCO3-) You Guessed it! Exercise causes a blood gas homeostatic emergency! Pulmonary Anatomy Upper Respiratory Tract: Nose, Nasal Cavity,Pharynx etc. Lower Respiratory Tract: Larynx, Trachea, Bronchi Lungs Pleural Membrane Circulation and Lymphatics Structure and Function: Ventilation: Breathing – airways/respiratory muscles Gas Exchange: Interface between air/blood Alveoli Pulmonary capillaries VERY thin diffusion distance VERY great surface area Assignment: Read pages 393-406 Note: How do pressure gradients affect breathing (page 402-403) What is surfactant? What is a “pneumothorax”? Horace Pippin: “Cabin in the Cottonfields” 1930’s Gases and Gases in Solution Oxygen is a gas! Atmospheric Gases: Concentrations: Oxygen: 21% Nitrogen: 78+% Carbon Dioxide: 0.03% Concentration vs. Partial Pressure Concentration (content) reflects the relative amount of gas in a gas mixture Pressure: The force of “bouncing” gas molecules against the walls of any container (lungs, atmosphere, balloons) Speaking of Balloons! Let’s fill this balloon with expired air from our lungs: What are the gases? Put in the fridge Pressure and Partial Pressure Pressure: The force of ALL the gas molecules as they “bounce of the walls” Partial Pressure: The force of one particular TYPE of gas molecule as they bounce… In this room: Partial Pressure of guys vs. girls… Gas Laws: The effect of T and V on P… What happens to molecular movement when they heat up? T = P What happens to the force exerted against the walls, when the walls close in? V= P General Gas Law: •PV = T Or: P = T/V P = 1/V P = T Let’s check out the balloon… Temperature and Volume What happened to the cooled balloon? Why “Hot Air Balloons? Hot air molecules “expand”… Calculating Partial Pressures The atmospheric pressure at sea level is 760 mm Hg: 21% of that pressure force is from oxygen molecules: 760 mmHg X .21 = 160 mmHg Pressure and Diffusion: Gas Molecules move from levels of high pressure to lower pressure PRESSURE GRADIENT The pressure gradient of O2 between the alveoli and pulmonary capillary DRIVE O2 into the blood Oxygen “Gradients” in the Lung: 105 Pulmonary Capillary 40 = 40 mmHg Alveolus = 105 mmHg When the blood leaves the lung = 105 mmHg 105 105 105 Gas Pressures: mmHg Atm PO2 160 PCO2 0.3 Alv Deoxy Blood Oxy Tissue Blood Cells 105 40 105 40 40 40 45 45 Oxygen and Tissues The relative pressures of CO2 and O2 drive oxygen into the tissues and CO2into the blood Ventilation: Inspiration: Breathing in Diaphragm contracts Thorax Expands Increased Volume = Decreased Pressure compared to the air Air Moves from high to low pressures Ventilation: Expiration: Breathing out Diaphragm relaxes Thorax recoils Decreased Volume = Increased Pressure compared to outside air Air moves out of the lungs Surfactant: Lungs Expand: Pleural membranes pull lungs out during inspiration Alveoli Expand: Surfactant coats the inner surface of the alveoli, and reduces surface tension –which keeps the alveoli from collapsing during exhalation The Purpose of Ventilation: To Get Oxygen from the atmosphere to the needy tissues Gas enters the blood only from the alveoli. The remainder of the respiratory tract is “Dead Space” Gas Exchange: Efficiency Depends on: Pressure Gradients between alveoli and capillary PO2 Solubility constant:(O2 is OK) Diffusion Distance: 2 cells thick Surface Area: All those alveoli increase the surface area of the lungs to 70 m2 The Hemoglobin Assist! Hemoglobin in Red Blood Cells increases the O2 carrying capacity of the blood Hemoglobin has a “heavy attraction” (affinity) to oxygen Hemoglobin carries ~98.5% of the O2 in the blood Hemoglobin-Oxygen Dissociation Curve: Carbon Dioxide: Highest in the tissues High solubility and diffusion 7% dissolved in plasma 23% combine with hemoglobin 70% combine with H2O CO2 + H2O H2CO3 Bicarbonate and pH At physiologic conditions (tissues): H2CO3 + H + HCO3 - So CO2 causes a decrease in pH CARBONIC ANHYDRASE is the enzyme catalyst Breathing and pH In the lung, the reaction reverses: H2CO3 H2O + CO2 So Exhaling blows off CO2 … AND reduces H+ RESPIRATORY COMPENSATION (of acidosis) Assignment: Read Pages: 406-410 Read Lab for Monday Have a good weekend!