Respiratory System Flashcards

1
Q

What is diffusion

A

The movement of gas molecules from an area of higher partial pressure to an area of lower partial pressure

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2
Q

What is gaseous exchange

A

The movement of oxygen from the air into the blood, and carbon dioxide from the blood into the air

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3
Q

What is needed for expiration

A

The pressure has to be higher in the lungs than the atmosphere. Done by decreasing volume of thorax due to the relaxation of inspiratory muscles in the thorax

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4
Q

What muscles are used during breathing at rest when inspiring

A

diaphragm - external intercostal muscles

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5
Q

What muscles are used during breathing at rest when expiring

A

diaphragm relaxes - external intercostals relax - use abdominals and internal intercostals

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6
Q

What is tidal volume

A

The volume air breathed in or out per breath

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7
Q

What is inspiratory reserve volume

A

The volume of air that can forcibly be inspired after a normal breath

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8
Q

What is expiratory reserve volume

A

Volume of air that can be forcibly expired after a normal breath

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9
Q

What is minute ventilation

A

The volume of air inspired or expired per minute

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10
Q

How is minute ventilation calculated

A

Respiratory Frequency (per min) x tidal volume

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11
Q

What is residual volume

A

The amount of air that remains in the lungs after maximal expiration

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12
Q

What happens to tidal volume during exercise

A

Increases

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13
Q

What happens to inspiratory reserve volume during exercise

A

Decreases

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14
Q

What happens to expiratory volume reserve during exercise

A

Slight decrease

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15
Q

What happens to residual volume during exercise

A

Stays the same

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16
Q

What happens to minute ventilation during exercise

A

Big increase

17
Q

What is partial pressure

A

The pressure exerted by an individual gas when it exists within a mixture of gases

18
Q

What is the difference in partial pressure referred to

A

Concentration gradient

19
Q

What three factors are involved in the regulation of pulmonary ventilation (breathing) during exercise

A

neural control- chemical control- hormonal control

20
Q

What is neural control

A

Involves the brain and the nervous system to regulate breathing

21
Q

What is chemical control

A

Control concerned with the blood acidity to regulate breathing

22
Q

What happens when the blood acidity is high

A

The brain is informed and it sends impulses through the nervous system to increasing breathing

23
Q

What two systems controls pulmonary ventilation (breathing)

A

sympathetic nervous system - parasympathetic nervous system

24
Q

what does the respiratory centre of the medulla oblongata control

A

rate and depth of breathing and uses neural and chemical control

25
Q

what would stimulate the respiratory centre to increase respiratory rate

A

an increase in concentration of carbon dioxide

26
Q

The respiratory centre has two main areas. What are they and what are they responsible for

A

Inspiratory centre, responsible for inspiration and expiration - Expiratory centre, stimulates the Expiratory muscles during exercise

27
Q

The inspiratory centre sends outs what via the phrenic nerve

A

Sends out nerve impulses to cause inspiratory muscles to contract

28
Q

What does the respiratory centre mainly respond to

A

Changes in blood chemistry

29
Q

What factors affect neural control of breathing

A

mechanical factors- baroreceptors- stretch receptor

30
Q

How do stretch receptors affect neural control of breathing during exercise

A

during exercise lungs are stretched more. These receptors prevent over-inflation of lungs by sending impulses to the expiratory centre and then down the intercostal nerve to the expiratory muscles so expiration occurs

31
Q

How do baroreceptors affect neural control of breathing during exercise

A

which detect increases and decreases of pressure in the aorta and carotid arteries and results in an increase in breathing rate

32
Q

How do mechanical factors affect neural control of breathing during exercise

A

Factors such as proprioceptors located in joints which provide feedback to the respiratory centre to increase breathing during exercise

33
Q

What is cilia

A

Microscopic hair-like projections that help to sweep away fluids and particles

34
Q

What is COPD

A

Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease A chronic disorder and debilitating disease, the name is collective for a number of diseases such as emphysema

35
Q

What is emphysema

A

A long term progressive disease of the lungs that causes shortness of breath caused by smoking

36
Q

What does smoking cause damage to

A

the alveoli as their walls break down and join together formimg larger air spaces than normal which reduces the efficiency of gaseous exchange.- smoking affects transport oxygen as carbon monoxide from cigarettes combines to the haemoglobin in red blood cells much more readily than oxygen. This reduces the oxygen carrying capacity of the blood