Transcript
Page 1: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

The Respiratory System

Page 2: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

What is Respiration?• Cellular level• Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using

oxygen to release energy (ATP)

• Organism level• Respiration refers to gas exchange, the releasing of carbon dioxide

and up taking oxygen between the lungs and the environment.

Page 3: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

The Human Respiratory System• Function: To exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide between the

blood, air and tissues

• Air enters through the nose to a tube at the back of the mouth called the pharynx, which is the passage way for both food and air.

• Air then moves to the trachea (windpipe), which leads into the lungs

Page 4: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

Cilia and Mucus• Hairs in your nose trap large particles so they do not get into your

lungs

• Mucus moistens the air and traps inhaled particles of dust or smoke

• Cilia sweep the tapped particles and mucus away form the lungs toward the pharynx

• Then the trapped particles get either swallowed or spit out.

Page 5: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

The Larynx• Is located at the top of the trachea

• It contains two elastic folds of tissue known as the vocal cords.

• Muscles can pull the vocal cords together, and when air passes over them they create sound

• This is how we can speak, shout, and sing.

Page 6: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

The Bronchi• The trachea leads to two passage ways that bring air into each lung,

the bronchi

• Each bronchus leads into one of the lungs, and then these divide into smaller passage ways called bronchioles

• At the end of the bronchioles there are millions of tiny air sacs called alveoli

Page 7: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

Gas Exchange• Gas exchange happens by diffusion across the membrane of an alveolus and

a capillary

• Oxygen dissolves in the moisture on the inner surface of the alveoli an then diffuses across the thin-walled capillaries into the blood• Carbon dioxide diffusion in the opposite directions

• Inhaled air is ~ 21% oxygen and ~ 0.04% carbon dioxide, Exhaled air contains less than 15% oxygen and 4% carbon dioxide.

Page 8: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy
Page 9: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

Breathing• Breathing is the movement of air into and out of the lungs

• There are no muscles connected to the lungs, the muscle that drives this is the diaphragm

• The diaphragm is the large flat muscle at the bottom of the chest cavity that can pull air into your lungs by contracting and allows air to leave the lungs when it relaxes.

Page 10: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy
Page 11: The Respiratory System. What is Respiration? Cellular level Cellular respiration is when the mitochondria breaks down food using oxygen to release energy

How Breathing is Controlled• The medulla oblongata is responsible for controlling your breathing,

this is part of your autonomic nervous system, meaning it is controlled involuntary

• You can control your breathing voluntarily, however your somatic nervous system will force you to breathe when to much carbon dioxide is detected in your blood


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