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VCE Unit 1 Biology Respiration Lung structure and function The respiratory system Structure of the respiratory system? 1. Air enters the nose/mouth 2. Air travels in the trachea 3. Air reaches major bronchi 4. Air then gets fed through a number of smaller tubes called bronchioles 5. Air eventually reaches the alveoli Functions of the upper airway • • • • Nose, larynx and trachea Warms and humidifies inspired air Traps & eliminates foreign particles – involved in coughing Not involved in gas exchange Functions of the lower airway • From the bronchi to lungs • Secrete mucus to catch foreign material • Cilia (hair-like structure on top of cell) can beat to push mucus back up airways where it can be coughed out The alveoli are the site of gas exchange • There are approximately 8 million alveoli in our lungs • The look a bit like a bunch of grapes • If you spread out each of these alveoli, they would take up an entire tennis court! Alveoli are surrounded by capillaries Why do you think this is the case? Alveoli are surrounded by capillaries Answer: • Capillaries ensure that the breathed “air” is brought into close proximity to the “pulmonary” blood. • This allows thorough gas exchange between the air and the blood Thin tissue separates blood from alveoli • Alveolar and capillary walls are thin, permitting rapid diffusion of gases. • Each RBC is only in lung capillary for 1 second (RBC) Answer the following in your workbooks • Where does gas exchange occur? • What structures does air pass through to get to the site of gas exchange? • What would happen if there was a thick gap between the alveoli and the capillaries? • Name a disease where the gap between the alveoli and capillary is increased. • What respiratory structure is affected in bronchitis and asthma? Questions to be finished for homework and handed in next class Respiratory muscles allow us to inspire • There are two phases in respiration (breathing): inspiration and expiration • Inspiration (breathing in) allows gas to enter the lung • Expiration (breathing out) allows gas to exit the lung The process of inspiration • Inspiration relies on the diaphragm and the rib muscles • The diaphragm is a very thin muscle that separates the chest cavity from the abdomen • During inspiration, the diaphragm and rib muscles contract. This increases the size of the chest cavity. • The increase in chest cavity size decreases pressure inside the chest. • As a result, the lungs are expanded and air is sucked in (just like a vacuum!) The process of expiration • Expiration occurs when the muscles relax • The lungs undergo a process called recoil which allows them to return to their original size • Recoil of the lungs occurs because the lungs are very elastic – just like an elastic band! Question: what happens to an elastic band after you stretch it? Muscles of Respiration Inspiration • Inspiratory muscles act to chest volume • Diaphragm - major inspiratory muscle • Rib muscles – help the diaphragm to increase chest volume Expiration • The muscles relax • The lungs recoil because they are elastic Lung expansion relies on intrapleural pressure. • How does increasing and decreasing thoracic volume alter lung volume? • The lungs are only attached at the hilus! • Lung expansion following increased thoracic volumes is dependent on intrapleural pressures Lung only attached at hilus What is intrapleural space? • Each lung is attached to and surrounded by a thin membrane called a visceral pleural sac Visceral pleura • The inside of the rib cage is also covered in a thin membrane called the parietal pleura • These two membranes are separated by the a thin layer of liquid known as the intrapleural space • Imagine effects of drop of water between two glass sheets - easy to slide; hard to pull apart Parietal pleura Intrapleural space (-5cmH2O) Why is intrapleural space important? • The pressure within the intrapleural space is negative (like a vacuum). This holds the lungs open even though they want to collapse like an elastic band • When the chest expands during inspiration, the intraplueral pressure becomes even more negative and sucks the lung to the chest wall • This results in the lungs expanding during inspiration Visceral pleura Parietal pleura Intrapleural space Loss of intrapleural pressure Sheep diaphragm Loss of intrapleural pressure… Using a model to understand breathing • Using the instructions provided on the handout, make your own model of a chest cavity, diaphragm and lungs • This will help you understand the processes of inspiration, expiration and intrapleural pressure • Complete the questions on the handout (for homework if necessary) What is in the air we breathe? • Atmospheric air contains mostly nitrogen gas and oxygen • Nitrogen makes up approximately 80% of air but is “inert” • Oxygen makes up approximately 21% of air • Not much carbon dioxide is in atmospheric air – it only makes up a tiny percentage (0.0004%!) • Small amounts of water vapour and other gases are also present What do our cells need? • The cells in our body need oxygen to survive • They use this oxygen in a process called metabolism to create energy • A by-product of metabolism is the generation of carbon dioxide • Carbon dioxide can be toxic if it builds up in the body • Therefore, the lungs need to supply oxygen for our cells but remove carbon dioxide How do the lungs do this? • Via a process called “gas exchange” • Gas exchange does not occur on a 1:1 basis (ie 1 molecule of oxygen is not exchanged for every molecule of carbon dioxide) • Rather the entry of oxygen into the blood and the removal of carbon dioxide occurs according to differences in concentrations between the alveoli and blood • That is, it occurs via diffusion, down a concentration gradient What happens then? • Once oxygen diffuses across the alveoli, it enters the blood. Which components of blood carries oxygen? • Gases dissolve within the blood. They do not exist as bubbles. (eg The bends in diving – what happens when bubbles of gas form in the body?) • The oxygenated blood travels to the heart and then around the body to the tissues/cells. Blood goes to tissues and then returns to the lung • The oxygen diffuses down its concentration gradient to enter the tissues • Carbon dioxide concentrations are high in the cells. What do you think happens to the carbon dioxide here? • Blood returning to the lung is deoxygenated. What does this mean? • What happens to this blood at the lungs? • What happens to the blood then? Think back to your circulation lessons! Diffusion of gases at the alveoli Gas exchange re-enactment • Come and collect 3 balloons each • There are 3 different colours and different numbers of each colour • Which gas do you think each colour represents (nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide – think about relative percentages) • If you have brown eyes, you are going to represent gas in the atmosphere are in the lungs • If you have don’t have brown eyes, you need to stand behindn the tables – you are gas molecules in the blood stream