Respiritory system Flashcards

1
Q

what is tidal volume?

A

tidal volume is the amount of air briefed in with each normal breath

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2
Q

what is the average amount of air a human breathes in?

A

500 mL

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3
Q

What is the inspiratory reserved volume?

A

The inspiratory reserve volume is the maximum amount of additional air that can be taken into the lungs after a normal breath

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4
Q

What is the expiratory reserve volume?

A

The expiratory reserve volume is the amount of air that can be forced out of the lungs after a normal breath

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5
Q

what is the residual volume?

A

Residual volume is the amount of air left in the lungs or maximum out of breath. This air helps to keep the lungs, partially inflated and protect them.

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6
Q

How does inspiration work?

A

The diaphragm contracts and moves downwards. The intercostal muscles contract and move upwards and outwards. This increases the size of the chest and decreases air pressure sucking the air into the lungs.

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7
Q

how do muscles work to assist inspiration when exercise occurs?

A

When exercise occurs, inspiration can be assisted by the pectoral muscles and sternocleidomastoid, which helps lift the ribs even further out

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8
Q

how does expiration work?

A

The diaphragm relaxes move backs to its domed shape. The intercostal muscles relax, so the ribs move inward and downward under their own weight. This decreases the size of the chest and increases the air pressure in the chest so air is forced out of the lungs.

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9
Q

how is expiration assisted during exercise by muscles?

A

During exercises, the abdominal muscles contract and push the diaphragm even further upwards to increase air pressure outside of the lungs sucking the air out of the lungs

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10
Q

what happens when we breathe in?

A

. Our lungs inflate
. the intercostal muscles contract and move our ribs, outwards and upwards
. The diaphragm contracts and moves downwards.

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11
Q

What happens when we breathe out?

A

. Our lungs deflate.
. The intercostal muscles relax and move our ribs downwards and inwards.
. the diaphragm relaxes and returns to its normal dome position

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12
Q

Define haemoglobin

A

The protein found in red blood cells that transport oxygen and carbon dioxide

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13
Q

define Oxyhaemoglobin

A

A chemical formed when haemoglobin bonds to oxygen

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14
Q

define gaseous exchange

A

The process where oxygen from air and the alveoli moves into the blood in the capillaries while carbon dioxide moves from the blood in the capillaries into the air in the alveoli

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15
Q

define diffusion

A

The movement of a substance from a high particle pressure to a low particle pressure

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16
Q

what are the characteristics of the alveoli?

A

. thin cell walls – short diffusion pathway.
. Moist in a surface – gas can dissolve and diffuse quicker
. Rich blood supply – more gas exchange.

17
Q

describe the pathway of air

A

Enters the body through the mouth and nose and passes through the pharynx and then through the larynx and then the trachea. The trachea then branches off into the lungs into the Bronchus. The Bronchus then divides into many small branches called the bronchioles. The air then travels into the alveoli where gaseous exchange occurs.

18
Q

define anaerobic respiration

A

The process of cellular respiration that occurs in the absence of oxygen

19
Q

define aerobic respiration

A

The process of cellular respiration that occurs in the presence of oxygen

20
Q

what does EPOC stand for?

A

Excess post-exercise oxygen consumption

21
Q

what is EPOC

A

The amount of oxygen needed to recover after exercise is characterised by deep breathing and increased inspiration rate

22
Q

Define lactic acid

A

A mild poison and waste product of anaerobic respiration

23
Q

what are the waste products of aerobic respiration?

A

Carbon dioxide and water

24
Q

what are the waste products of anaerobic respiration?

A

Lactic acid