Chapter 19: Respiratory System
Indicate four changes that take place in the respiratory system of the elderly.
-Macrophages are less efficient. -Coughing reflexes slow down. -Number of alveoli decreases. -Mucus becomes thicker.
Which components are part of the lower respiratory system?
-bronchial tree -trachea -lungs
The purposes of nonrespiratory movements of air include ______.
-clearing air passages -verbal communication -expressing emotions
List three functions of the pharynx.
-conducts air from nasal cavity to the larynx -conducts food from oral cavity to esophagus -helps in the production of sounds
List three functions of the respiratory system.
-obtain oxygen for the body -produce vocal sounds -regulate blood pH
Which are three functions of the respiratory system?
-regulate blood pH -participate in gathering olfactory information -remove CO2 from the body
In which four bones are paranasal sinuses located?
-sphenoid -frontal -ethmoid -maxilla
List the correct order for air flow, with the more proximal airway at the top of the list and the most distal airway at the bottom.
1. main bronchus 2. lobar bronchus 3. segmental bronchus 4. intralobular bronchiole 5. terminal bronchiole 6. respiratory bronchiole
Name the respiratory volume that is defined as the amount of air moved in, then out, during a single respiratory cycle.
Tidal volume (TV)
True or false: As a human ages, fibrous connective tissue replaces some smooth muscle in the bronchioles of the lungs.
True
True or false: The respiratory membrane is very thin so that oxygen and carbon dioxide can easily diffuse across it.
True
What are alveoli?
air sacs
Microscopic air pouches clustered at the distal ends of the alveolar ducts are called ______.
alveoli
The ______ are the sites of gas exchange between the air and the blood.
alveoli
The thin-walled sacs of the lungs that are responsible for gas exchange are called ______.
alveoli or alveolus
Which structure is the site of gas exchange in the lungs?
alveolus
Define minute ventilation.
amount of air moved into airways per minute
The force that moves air into the lungs is ______ pressure.
atmospheric
The pressure that moves air into the lungs during inspiration is the pressure of the air around us, called ______ pressure.
atmospheric or atmosphere
Why does carbon dioxide diffuse from the tissues into the capillaries?
because the PCO2 is higher in the tissues than in the blood
The receptors involved in the control of respiration include ______.
both mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors
Which method is used to carry approximately 98% of the oxygen in the blood?
bound to the iron portion of the hemoglobin molecules in red blood cells
The control centers for respiration (respiratory areas) are located in which part of the central nervous system?
brainstem
Pair each word element with its meaning.
carcin- = spreading sore carin- = keel-like tuber- = swelling
The hollow space just behind the nose is called the nasal ______.
cavity
Air moves out of the lungs when the size of the thoracic cavity ______.
decreases
What is the role of the hairs of the nose?
filter incoming air
In which direction will air flow?
from an area of high pressure to an area of low pressure
The difference in distribution of gases between two areas, such as within the alveoli and alveolar capillaries, is called the partial pressure ______.
gradient
Almost all of the oxygen diffusing into the alveolar capillaries becomes bound to the protein called ______ on the surfaces of red blood cells.
hemoglobin
Blood flowing through the tissue capillaries picks up carbon dioxide because active tissues, such as skeletal muscle, have a relatively ______ PCO2 compared to the blood.
high
A gas will diffuse from an area of ______ partial pressure for the gas to an area of ______ partial pressure.
higher; lower
Air will flow from an area of ______ pressure to an area of ______ pressure.
higher; lower
Which represents a proper path for incoming air flow?
intralobular bronchioles to terminal bronchioles
The airway enlargement that is superior to the trachea, anterior and somewhat inferior to the laryngopharynx is called the ______.
larynx
The structure that houses the vocal cords and acts as a passageway for air moving in and out of the trachea is the ______.
larynx
The trachea conducts air from the ______ to the primary bronchi.
larynx
What is the anatomical name of the "voice-box," a cartilaginous region of the airway that contains the vocal cords?
larynx
The trachea, bronchial tree, and the lungs all belong to the ______.
lower respiratory tract
Control of respiration is based on input from mechanoreceptors that monitor ______ and chemoreceptors that monitor ______.
lung inflation; blood O2, CO2, and pH
Control of respiration is based on input from ______ that monitor lung inflation and ______ that monitor O2, CO2, and pH.
mechanoreceptors; chemoreceptors
The amount of air moved into the airways each minute is called the ______ ventilation.
minute
What is the term for the hollow space located just behind the nose?
nasal cavity
Air movements other than breathing, such as coughing or sneezing to clear air passages, are called ______ movements.
nonrespiratory
The openings through which air can enter and leave the nasal cavity are called the external nares or ______.
nostrils or nostril
Decreasing the size of the thoracic cavity causes air to move ______ the lungs.
out of
The respiratory system functions to obtain ______ and remove ______.
oxygen; carbon dioxide
The ______ pleura lines the inner wall of the thoracic cavity and superior surface of the diaphragm.
parietal
In a mixture of gases, the amount of pressure each gas contributes to the total pressure is called the ______ pressure of gas.
partial
The concentration of a specific gas in a mixture of gases is proportional to the ______ of that gas.
partial pressure
The segment of the respiratory tract that functions as a passageway for both food and air is the ______. It is also involved in producing sounds of speech.
pharynx
The structure that acts as a passageway for food moving from the oral cavity to the esophagus and for air passing between the nasal cavity and the larynx is the ______.
pharynx
What is the serous membrane that encloses each lung?
pleura
Both inspiration and expiration are under the control of groups of neurons in the brainstem that comprise the ______ areas.
respiratory or respiration
The hollow spaces located within the frontal, sphenoid, maxillary, and ethmoid bones are called ______.
sinuses, sinus, or paranasal sinuses
The root word "carcin-" means ______, while "tuber-" means ______.
spreading sore; swelling
In order to allow adequate gas diffusion, the respiratory membrane must be ______.
thin
Carbon dioxide produced through cellular metabolism diffuses from the ______ into the ______.
tissue cells; systemic capillaries
Air passes from the larynx, through the ______, to the primary bronchi.
trachea
Which of these structures is part of the lower respiratory system?
trachea
Another term for breathing, describing air movement into and out of the alveoli, is ______.
ventilation
The movement of air from outside the body into the bronchial tree and alveoli, followed by a reversal of this air movement is called breathing or ______.
ventilation
The ______ pleura is a serous membrane closely attached to the lung surface. The ______ pleura lines the pleural cavity.
visceral; parietal
What is tidal volume?
volume of air moved in and out a single respiratory cycle