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
Gas Exchange Gas exchange SLOs Be able to define gas exchange Be able to label and list the parts of the human breathing system Be able to explain the breathing process Respiration Release of energy in the cells of the body (needs OXYGEN) Breathing (ventilation) Mechanical movement of body parts in order to inhale and exhale air Inhale- exhale Ribs move up and out Diaphragm moves down Ribs move down and in Diaphragm moves up From the front… Lung capacity demo/practical Did you know…? The human lung can hold 6 litres of air. But only a small amount of air is moved in and out of the lungs during breathing. (500ml in normal breathing, 4.6 litres after inhaling forcefully, then breathing out completely) The largest human lung capacity recorded is that of British rower Peter Reed (rower) at 11.68 litres. roughly twice that of an average person Lung capacity depends on: Gender Height Smoking Exercise Pneumothorax : air trapped in the chest cavity. (Tension pneumothorax: lifethreatening) Gas exchange Gas Oxygen Carbon dioxide Nitrogen Inhaled air (air entering lungs) 21% Exhaled air (air leaving lungs) 17% 0.04% 4% 78% 78% The air we breath out have less oxygen and more carbon dioxide It is important to distinguish between 3 important terms: Gas Exchange = oxygen enters the body & carbon dioxide leaves. Breathing = a mechanical process that moves air in & out of the lungs. Respiration is a biological process occurring in all cells in the body where food & oxygen are taken in to release energy for the cell. Be careful not to use the word respiration when you mean breathing or gas exchange. Label diagram of human resp. sys. Alveoli (plural) Alveolus (single) Inflated Surfactant Lipoprotein produced by alveolar cells Reduced surface tension (if no surfactant – lung cannot inflate normally) Gas exchange WB page 12 - Read notes and create a flow diagram following the movement of air from the atmosphere to the bloodstream AIR (outside) Oral cavity AIR (outside) Bronchiole Alveoli (air sacks) Oral cavity Bronchi Surfactant Bloodstream Larynx (voice box) Trachea (air pipe) Capillary wall In the alveoli: - oxygen moves into the blood - carbon dioxide moves out of the blood WB page 13: Deoxygenated blood: blood with little oxygen Oxygenated blood: blood with lots of oxgyen Nose Air enters and leaves through – filters air for dust/bacteria using hairs & mucus Voice box – may be used to make larynx sounds Connects the mouth and lungs, rings of Trachea cartilage keep it open for efficient gas exchange Where the trachea splits into two tubes Bronchi and enters the lungs Thin walled ‘bunches of balloons’ have alveoli a rich blood supply for easy gas exchange 6. Inhale – breathing in – muscles between the ribs contract pulling the ribs up and out. The diaphragm moves down and flattens out and this increases the volume of the chest Exhaling – Breathing out – diaphragm relaxes and moves up, and ribs move down and in. http://health.howstuffworks.com/adam200020.htm