anatomy & histology of respiratory system Flashcards
What are the functions of the respiratory system?
* airflow - allow movement of air in and out of site of gaseous exchange
* **gas exchange and transport **of oxygen and CO2
* conditions air : warm, filter and humidify air
* temperature regulation
* immune protection - against microbes and foreign matter
What is inspiration?
- the movement of air from the external environment into the alveoli
what is expiration?
- the movement of air from the alevoli **to the external environment **
Compare and contrast the conducting vs respiratory zone
1. Conducting zone - nasal cavity functions to get air in, moisten and clean air
2. respiratory zone - (alveoli) gas exchange
how does air enter the nasal cavity?
through 2 nostrils
what is the pharynx?
- passageway that connects the nasal and oral cavity
what are the** functions of the larynx**?
- maintains open passageway for** air movement **
- prevents swallowed materials from entering the trachea
- sound production
Describe the branching of the respiratory tract
hint: what are the 2 main zones? start from trachea
-
Conducting zone
* the trachea branches into the left and right bronchi
* the bronchi branches into** bronchioles** which then split into terminal bronchioles **
2. Respiratory zone**
* terminal bronchioles branch into **respiratory bronchioles **
* respiratory bronchioles branch into alveolar ducts which then branch into alveolar sacs
what is the** function** of the trachea?
- warm, clean & conduct air
What is present in the mucosa of the trachea?
- respiratory epithelium (pseudostratified ciliated tall columar cells )
- goblet cells
- serous cells
- basal cells
- brush cells
- basement membrane
what glands does the submucosa of the trachea contain?
seromucous glands (mixed)
What type of cartilage is present in the trachea and what is it’s** function**?
- C shaped hyaline cartilage
- function : allows trachea to maintain an open position, providing respiratory support
What is the smooth muscle in the trachea called & what happens when it contracts?
trachealis muscle
* contraction of this muscle **reduces the diameter **
How is the basic structure of the bronchus different to the trachea?
- respiratory epithelium is **less tall with fewer goblet cells **
- the lamina propia has** more elastin fibres** and is separated from the submucosa
* smooth muscle becomes more prominent in distal bronchi - submucosa has less seromucous glands
- cartilage is flattened interconnected plates rather than distinct rings
Describe the structure of bronchioles (in comparison to bronchus)
- no cartilage!
- no submucosal glands !
- few goblet cells
- ciliated columnar epithelium which later becomes squamous
what elements of the lower respiratory tract are in the respiratory zone?
- respiratory bronchioles
- alveolar ducts
- alveolar sac’s
- alveoli
what do respiratory bronchioles divide into?
- they divide into several alverolar ducts (AD) which have several alveoli
- the alveolar ducts end in an alveolar sac which in turn opens to several alveoli
Describe alveoli
- aprrox 300 mill air sacs
- very **large surface area **
- 1 cell thick
- surrounded by capillaries
- alveolar pores (of Kohn) (discrete holes between adjacent alveoli) which allow some movement of air between alveoli
what are the alveolar pores of Kohn and what is their function?
- discrete holes in the walls of alveoli
- they allow the movement of air between adjacent alveoli
what does the alveolar wall consist of?
- surface epithelium
- supporting tissue
- **blood vessel **
-
Type I pneumocytes (alveolar lining cells)
* Type II pneumocytes P2 - capillaries with red blood cells
- alveolar** macrophages **
what is the function of alveolar macrophages?
- phagocytic cell
- contributes to immunity
What are type I pneumocytes & function?
- large flattened cells
- 95% surface area of alveoli
- facilitate gas exchange
- communicate with type II cells
What are type II pneumocytes and function?
- these cells** produce and secrete pulmonary surfactant **( which prevents alveolar collapse)
- they can regenerate alveoli after injury
what is the pleura?
- the pulmonary pleura are 2 opposing layers of serous membrane overlying the lungs and inside of the surrounding chest walls
what are the** 2 layers** of the pleura?
- parietal pleura - forms the internal lining of the chest cavity
- visceral pleura - externally coats the lung