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Respiratory Tract Gas Exchange Breathing Disease
Respiratory System
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Respiratory Tract Nasal (or oral) cavity Pharynx Larynx Trachea
Bronchi Bronchiole Alveoli
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Gas Exchange Oxygen goes into the blood vessel.
Carbon dioxide (a waste product) leaves the blood vessel into the alveolus.
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Nasal Cavity 3 main functions:
Cleans the air – nostrils contain tiny hairs that trap dirt particles Warms the air – capillaries carrying warm blood Moistens the air – membranes that secretes mucus
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Pharynx (throat) & Epiglottis
The place where the nasal cavity, oral cavity esophagus (digestive tract) and larynx (respiratory tract) meet Epiglottis is the door that allows food to go down the esophagus (digestive tract) and air down the trachea (respiratory tract)
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Larynx (voice box) Houses the vocal cords
Vibrations of the cords produces sound
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Larynx (voice box)
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Trachea (windpipe) Composed of cartilage (soft bone)
Helps maintains rigidity to prevent the respiratory passage from collapsing
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Trachea (windpipe) Lined with ciliated epithelial cells
Cells secrete mucus which traps foreign particles Cilia brush the mucus up the respiratory tract We sneeze or cough to expel mucus that has trapped foreign particles
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Bronchi The trachea branches into 2 bronchi leading to the left and right lung Bronchi branch into smaller bronchiole eventually ending at the alveoli Structures are reinforced with cartilage
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Alveoli Spherical hollow cavities increase surface area
Walls are only 1 cell thick making it easy for rapid diffusion Capillaries line the alveoli for gas exchange
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Breathing Process Inhalation: taking air into the lungs
Exhalation: breathing out air Muscles Diaphragm (between lung and stomach) Ribcage muscles
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Breathing
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Breathing Process Rib Muscles Cage Diaphragm Volume Internal Pressure
Air Inhalation Contract Expand (up and out) (moves down) Flattens Increase Decrease Moves in Exhalation Relax Reduce (down and in) (moves up) Dome-shaped Moves out
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Respiratory Diseases Laryngitis Bronchitis Asthma Pneumonia Emphysema
Turberculosis (TB) SARS
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Laryngitis Inflammation of the vocal cords.
Caused by overuse, irritation, infection
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Bronchitis Inflammation of bronchi. Caused by:
Microorganisms: virus, bacteria Environment: pollution, dust, smoke Irritation causes bronchi to swell.
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Bronchitis Cilia immobilized Respiratory passage clog with debris
Heavy mucus formed resulting in a cough
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Asthma Chronic, inflammatory disease resulting in obstructed airflow.
Inflammation and swelling of bronchiole walls produces extra mucus Constriction of muscles around bronchiole
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Asthma
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Asthma Allergies and air pollution can trigger asthma.
Condition is usually reversible Short term treatment: puffers that contain bronchiodilators Long term treatment: anti-inflammatory drugs, anti-allergy shots
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Pneumonia Infection of the lungs, leading to fluid in the alveoli.
Caused by a microorganism Treated with antibiotics
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Smoking Injures the cilia of the trachea so that they cannot remove foreign particles as effectively. Tar, a black sticky sooty material, a by-product of burning tobacco, coats the lungs. Key cause of lung cancer.
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Emphysema Alveoli become brittle Alveoli walls fuse together
Reduces the surface area for gas exchange Lung loses elasticity
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Tuberculosis (TB) Infectious disease caused by a bacteria that grows in the lung Conceptual image of Mycobacterium Tuberculosis bacteria on a cellular surface
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Tuberculosis (TB) Symptoms are general: fever, cough, chest pain, tiredness Bacteria can remain dormant in body for decades and can also recur in patients who have had TB before Diagnosis: chest x-ray, swab . Coloured X-ray (front view) of the chest in a 50 year old male patient, showing fibrosis in the lungs from old tuberculosis (orange, at upper left) and an infection of new tuberculosis (green, at right). TB can recur at periods when the patient's immune system is weakened.
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Tuberculosis (TB) Chest x-ray of a 25 year old male patient with TB.
Lung (dark areas) show grainy white patches which are the affected areas.
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SARS Severe acute respiratory syndrome
Epidemic gripped Toronto in 2003 Spread from a region in China 44 deaths in Canada of 438 cases
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SARS Outbreak
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SARS Symptoms: flu like, high fever, shortness of breath, dry cough, sore throat, headache, muscle pain, exhaustion Diagnosis: chest x-ray, swab
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