Respiratory System

Cards (37)

  • What is the primary function of the respiratory system?
    To breathe air into the lungs
  • How does the respiratory system transfer oxygen?
    Through diffusion from lungs to blood
  • What happens to carbon dioxide in the respiratory system?
    It diffuses from blood into the lungs
  • Why are the functions of the respiratory system more pronounced during physical activities?
    Because the body requires more oxygen
  • What structures warm, filter, and moisten incoming air?
    The nose, nasal cavity, and mouth
  • What is the pathway of air from the throat to the lungs?
    Throat to trachea to bronchi to bronchioles
  • What lines the trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles?
    A mucous membrane and cilia
  • What is the role of cilia in the respiratory system?
    To push mucus to the back of the throat
  • Where does gas exchange occur in the lungs?
    In the alveolar sacs containing alveoli
  • What muscle forms the base of the thoracic cavity?
    The diaphragm
  • What happens during inspiration at rest?
    External intercostal muscles and diaphragm contract
  • What is the effect of diaphragm contraction during inspiration?
    It increases the volume of the chest cavity
  • What occurs during expiration at rest?
    External intercostal muscles and diaphragm relax
  • What happens to the ribs during expiration at rest?
    They move back down
  • How does inspiration change during exercise?
    Muscles contract faster and more forcefully
  • What is the result of increased chest cavity volume during exercise?
    More air rushes into the alveoli
  • What additional muscles contract during expiration in exercise?
    Internal intercostal and abdominal muscles
  • What happens to oxygen and carbon dioxide during diffusion in the alveoli?
    Oxygen moves into blood; CO2 moves into alveoli
  • What is diffusion in the context of respiration?
    The movement of molecules down a concentration gradient
  • What is vital capacity?
    The maximum air exhaled after maximal inspiration
  • What is the typical vital capacity for men?
    4-5 litres
  • How does vital capacity differ for endurance athletes?
    They can have 6-7 litres of vital capacity
  • What is minute ventilation?
    The amount of air breathed in and out in one minute
  • How is minute ventilation calculated?
    Minute ventilation = tidal volume x frequency
  • What is the minute ventilation for an average person at rest?
    28 litres/min
  • What is the minute ventilation for an average person when exercising?
    100 litres/min
  • Why is it more efficient to increase ventilation through deeper breaths?
    It provides more oxygen than faster breaths
  • What does the respiratory centre in the brain detect during exercise?
    Increased levels of carbon dioxide in blood
  • What is the response of the respiratory centre to increased carbon dioxide?
    It sends impulses to increase breathing rate
  • How does regular aerobic endurance training affect respiratory muscles?
    It makes them stronger
  • What happens to vital capacity and minute ventilation with training?
    They can improve with regular training
  • How does increased surface area for gaseous exchange benefit athletes?
    More oxygen enters blood; more CO2 exits
  • What does increased diffusion capacity allow athletes to do?
    Work longer and harder without tiring
  • What is the ventilation rate for an unfit person?
    25 breaths per minute
  • How does training affect the number and diameter of capillaries around alveoli?
    They increase in number and diameter
  • What are the short-term effects of exercise on the respiratory system?
    • Increased breathing rate
    • Increased depth of breathing
    • Higher minute ventilation
    • More oxygen intake
  • What are the long-term effects of optimal training on the respiratory system?
    • Stronger respiratory muscles
    • Improved vital capacity and minute ventilation
    • Increased surface area for gas exchange
    • Enhanced oxygen uptake and carbon dioxide removal