Module 1: Unit 4 - Respiratory 1: Creative Commons Attribution - Noncommercial - Share Alike 3.0 License
Module 1: Unit 4 - Respiratory 1: Creative Commons Attribution - Noncommercial - Share Alike 3.0 License
Module 1: Unit 4 - Respiratory 1: Creative Commons Attribution - Noncommercial - Share Alike 3.0 License
00:05
The job of the respiratory system is to take up oxygen for
metabolism, and get rid of carbon dioxide, the byproduct
of metabolism.
In the chest the trachea divides into right and left bronchi.
Note that the right main bronchus is more in line with the
trachea than the left one, which has to dodge around the
heart; so if you accidentally get something in a bronchus,
it’s more likely to end up on the right. Then the doctor
may need a bronchoscope to get it out again. The bronchi
break up into smaller and smaller bronchi and then
bronchioles; it’s said there are 18 levels of branching.
02:25
The lungs are divided into three lobes on the right, and
two on the left (the heart takes up space that a third lobe
would need on the left.) At the ends of the smallest
bronchioles are the alveoli, or air sacs. This are formed of
a single layer of thin cells, woven through with
capillaries. It’s between these capillaries and the alveoli
that exchange of gasses takes place, and oxygen is taken
up while carbon dioxide is released. In the special case of
the lungs, blood arriving from the right side of the heart
is depleted of oxygen (so it’s relatively blue) while blood
returning to the heart from the lungs is oxygenated, and,
therefore, redder. These colors have to do with the
amount of oxygen loaded onto the carrier protein,
hemoglobin, in the red blood cells.
03:51
The lungs sit in a membrane-lined compartment called
the pleural cavity; it’s bounded by the ribcage and the
diaphragm. The ribcage is expandable by the strong
muscles between the ribs; it can move because the ribs
are attached to the breastbone by flexible cartilage. In
addition, the diaphragm contracts and flattens, which also
increases the size of the pleural cavity; air must rush in to
the lungs to prevent a vacuum. When we finish inhaling,
we relax rib and diaphragm muscles, and the pleural
cavity deflates by elastic recoil of its structures. A normal
adult inhales about 500 mL at a time, and breathes 14-20
times per minute. During exercise, of course, these
numbers can be greatly increased.