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Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

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Page 1: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Respiratory SystemBy: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Page 2: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Overview

The main job of the Respiratory system is to provide oxygen and remove carbon dioxide from the body.

Your respiratory system is made up of the organs in your body that help you to breathe.

Your body inhales air and then your respiratory system produces oxygen

Page 3: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Vocab

Alveoli-Tiny Air sacs in the lungs.

Larynx- The hollow muscular organ forming an air passage to the lungs and holding the vocal cords in humans and other mammals; the voice box.

Pharynx- The membrane-lined cavity behind the nose and mouth, connecting them to the esophagus.

Carbon Dioxide- a colorless, odorless gas produced by burning carbon and organic compounds and by respiration.

Page 4: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

More Vocab

Pleura- Each of a pair of serous membranes lining the thorax and enveloping the lungs in humans.

Thorax- The area between the neck and the abdomen, including the cavity enclosed by the ribs, breastbone, and dorsal vertebrae, and containing the chief organs of circulation and respiration.

Page 5: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Parts Of Respiratory System

Lungs: Main organs of the respiratory system.

Oxygen is taken into the body and carbon dioxide is breathed out.

Red blood cells are responsible for picking up the oxygen in the lungs and carrying the oxygen to all the body cells that need it.

Page 6: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Lungs Continued

Red blood cells drop off the oxygen to the body cells, then pick up the carbon dioxide.

The red blood cells transport the carbon dioxide back to the lungs and we breathe it out when we exhale.

Page 7: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Parts of Respiratory System

Trachea: Commonly known as the windpipe the trachea is essentially The trachea is a tunnel that connects your pharynx and larynx to your lungs, it allows your to pass air through your body.

Also connected to the inferior thyroid artery.

Around 10-16 centimeters long

5 ring shaped divots along the trachea that allow the air to pass through with ease and no complications.

Page 8: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Parts of Respiratory System

Bronchi: Two air tubes that branch off of the trachea and carry air directly into the lungs.

There is a right bronchus and a left bronchus and these bronchi branch into smaller secondary and tertiary bronchi which branch into smaller tubes, known as bronchioles.

The right main bronchus is wider, shorter, and more vertical than the left main bronchus.

Unlike the lungs and the Trachea the bronchi has no involvement with carbon dioxide or any kind of gases.

Page 9: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Bronchi continued Often asthma comes from an odd or irregular structure or build of the

bronchi which refrains the bronchi from carrying the air to the lungs therefore causing a difficult breathing process.

Bronchitis also comes from complications with the Bronchi. This comes from inflammation of lining of the bronchi tubes which pass the air through your respiratory system.

Page 10: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Parts of Respiratory System

Diaphragm: A dome-shaped muscle at the bottom of the lungs called the diaphragm is what the whole breathing process begins with.

When you breathe in, the diaphragm contracts.

When it contracts it flattens out and pulls downward. This movement enlarges the space that the lungs are in.

When you breathe out, the diaphragm expands reducing the amount of space for the lungs and forcing air out.

Page 11: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Diaphragm Continued

The diaphragm separates the thoracic cavity containing the heart and lungs, from the abdominal cavity

The diaphragm is located near the bottom of the lungs and extends across the bottom of the rib cage.

Page 12: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hc1YtXc_84A

Page 13: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Quiz-Matching

1. Alveoli

2. Larynx

3. Pleura

4. Pharynx

5.Carbon Dioxide

6. Thorax

7.Diaphragm

8. Bronchi

9.Trachea

10.Respiritory System

A. Tiny Air sacs in the lungs

B. The membrane-lined cavity behind the nose and mouth, connecting them to the esophagus.

C. The area between the neck and the abdomen, including the cavity enclosed by the ribs, breastbone, and dorsal vertebrae, and containing the chief organs of circulation and respiration.

D. A dome-shaped muscle at the bottom of the lungs called the diaphragm is what the whole breathing process begins with.

E. Two air tubes that branch off of the trachea and carry air directly into the lungs.

F. Commonly known as the windpipe the trachea is essentially The trachea is a tunnel that connects your pharynx and larynx to your lungs, it allows your to pass air through your body.

G. A system in your body that provides oxygen and removes carbon dioxide from the body.

H. a colorless, odorless gas produced by burning carbon and organic compounds and by respiration.

I. The hollow muscular organ forming an air passage to the lungs and holding the vocal cords in humans and other mammals; the voice box.

J. Each of a pair of serous membranes lining the thorax and enveloping the lungs in humans

Page 14: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Answers

1.A2.I3.J4.B5.H6.C 7.D 8.E9.F10.G

Page 15: Respiratory System By: Gerald Williams & Najhee Duhon

Thanks for listening