Transcript Slide 1
To help supply the blood with enough oxygen
to then deliver all over the body (through
breathing)
Removes carbon dioxide
from the body
o The carbon dioxide and
oxygen exchange takes place
in the alveoli (small air sacs in
the lungs)
Nasal passage: helps pass air to body Capillaries: blood vessels imbedded
Oral captivity: helps pass air to body on the walls of the alveoli
Pharynx: throat; a funnel shaped
Diaphragm: a dome-shaped muscle
passageway that leads to the trachea that works with your lungs to make the
Larynx: hollow muscular organ, voice body inhale air, push the air out and
box
reduce pressure in the thoracic cavity
Trachea: a tube connecting the nose
and mouth to the lungs
Bronchi: two tubes that passes air
through lungs and bronchioles
Alveoli: small pouches inside lungs,
location of carbon dioxide and oxygen
exchange
Lungs: main organ in the respiratory
system
Air is inhaled into the nose or mouth
It travels down the back of the throat and into the windpipe, or trachea
The trachea divides into air passages called bronchial tubes
The bronchial tubes pass through the lungs and divide into smaller air passages
called bronchioles
The bronchioles end in tiny balloon-like air sacs called alveoli
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Your body has over 300 million alveoli
The alveoli are surrounded by a mesh of tiny blood vessels
called capillaries
Oxygen, from the inhaled air, passes through the alveoli
walls and into the blood
After absorbing oxygen, the blood leaves the lungs and
is carried to the heart
Your heart then pumps it through your body to provide
oxygen to the cells of your tissues and organs
As the cells use the oxygen, carbon dioxide is produced
and absorbed into the blood
The blood then carries the carbon dioxide back to the
lungs through the capillaries, where it is removed from
the body when you exhale
Asthma often starts in childhood but the attacks
happen in all age groups
The disease is characterized by recurrent attacks of
breathlessness and wheezing
severity and frequency varies from person to person.
This condition is due to inflammation of the air
passages in the lungs affecting the sensitivity of the
nerve endings in the airways so they become easily
irritated. They swell causing the airways to narrow,
making it more difficult for air to flow in and out of
the lungs, causing an attack.
There isn’t a cure for asthma but there are ways to control it like:
Avoiding things that worsen your asthma (except physical activity)
Having an “action plan”
An action plan will help you figure out how severe your asthma is and
know when to call the doctor or go to the emergency room
It will also help determine what medicines you should take
Taking medicine
The preferred long-term medicine is inhaled corticosteroids
They are the most effective medicine for relief of inflammation and swelling
that makes your airways sensitive to certain
substances that may be inhaled
The preferred quick-relief medicine is Inhaled
short-acting beta2-agonists
They act quickly to relax the tight muscle around
your airways when you’re having a flare-up, so
the airways open and allow air to flow
Try avoiding these:
SMOKING
Second hand smoking
Dusty and harsh polluted areas
Instead do:
Exercise
Maintain a healthy diet
1. What is the main organ in the
Respiratory System?
A) Kidneys
B) Lungs
C) Heart
D) Trachea
4. What is the main function of the
diaphragm?
A) Brings in air through nose
passageways
B) Pushes air in
2. The air sacs in the lungs are correctly C) Holds lungs in place
called…
D) Helps push the air out and reduce
A) Alveoli
pressure in the thoracic cavity
B) Capillaries
C) Papillae
5. What is the preferred entry for air to
D) Villi
enter the respiratory system?
A) Pharynx
3. Carbon Dioxide is carried through the B) Trachea
bloodstream by…
C) Nose
A) Carbon monoxide
D) Nasal Cavity
B) Ammonia
C) The nerves system
D) carboxyhemoglobin
6. What is the body getting rid of when
you breathe out?
A) Oxygen
B) Carbon dioxide
C) Hydrogen
D) Nitrogen
7. Gas exchange in the body…
A) Controls the hearts rate
B) The amount of air brought in
C) The amount of time you can hold your
breathe
D) Controls the rate of respiration
9. The small pouches inside our body is
referred to…
A) Alveoli
B) Lungs
C) Kidneys
D) Diaphragm
10. About how many alveoli does the
body contain?
A) 3 Billion
8. What is the direction of the diffusion of B) 200 Million
gases in the alveoli of the lungs?
C) 300 million
A) Left lung to right lung
D) 2 billion
B) Oxygen into blood, CO2 out of the
blood
C) Right to left
D) Oxygen into blood, CO2 into blood
Brewer, Sarah. The Human Body: A Visual Guide to
Human Anatomy. London: Quercus, 2009. Print.
Parker, Steve. The Human Body Book. New York: DK
Pub., 2007. N. pag. Print.
YouTube. YouTube. YouTube, 05 May 2010. Web. 12
May 2013.
http://www.webmd.com/lung/how-we-breathe
http://www.as.wvu.edu/~sraylman/physiology/fig1
326version11_ct.html
http://www.brainpop.com/health/respiratorysyste
m/respiratorysystem/preview.weml