Breathing and gas exchange Flashcards

1
Q

Where are the lungs?

A
  • In the thorax

- Lungs are elastictend to empty like a ballon

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2
Q

How are lungs protected?

A

The lungs are enclosed by the ribcage and the diaphragm

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3
Q

What are the lungs surrounded by?

A

The pleural membranes

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4
Q

What happens to the air you breath?

A
  1. When we breath air goes in our nose or mouth and passes down the trachea
  2. The trachea then splits into two bronchi, one bronchus going into each lung
  3. Each bronchus then splits into progressively smaller tubes called bronchioles
  4. Eventually ending with microscopic air sacs called alveoli
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5
Q

How are the walls of the trachea and bronchi supported?

A

They are supported and kept open when we breath in with rings of cartilage

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6
Q

Describe what happens when you breathe in

A
  1. External costal muscle, intercostal muscles (pull ribs up and out) and diaphragm contract (flattens)
  2. Thorax volume increases
  3. This decreases the pressure compared with outside air
    - This draws air in
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7
Q

Describe what happens when you breathe out

A
  1. Internal costal muscles, intercostal muscles (pulls ribs down and in) and diaphragm relax (dome shape)
  2. Thorax volume decreases
  3. Higher pressure than air outside thorax (raised slightly above atmospheric pressure)
    - Differences in pressure forces air out of lungs
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8
Q

How can you investigate the effect of exercise on breathing rate in humans?

A
  1. Sit still for five minutes. Then for one minute count the number of breaths you take
  2. Then do four minutes of exercise and as soon as you stop count your breaths for a minute
  3. Two other people also do experiment so three sets of results to compare
  4. Results should show that exercise increases breathing rate
  5. Control all variables that might affect your results e.g. time spent exercising using a stopwatch and the temperature of the room using air conditioning or a thermostat
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9
Q

Why does your breathing rate increase when you exercise?

A

When we exercise our muscles are working harder, and so more energy is required, and so more respiration is required, which means more oxygen is required and so your breaths are faster and deeper

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10
Q

What do alveoli do?

A

-Carry out gas exchange in the body (gas exchange by diffusion between air in the lungs and blood in capillaries

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11
Q

Describe the gas exchange in the alveoli

A
  1. Blood from respiring tissues have given up some of its oxygen and gained carbon dioxide, therefore there is a high concentration of carbon dioxide and a low concentration of oxygen in the blood
  2. This means that there is a higher concentration of carbon dioxide in the blood than in the alveolus and carbon dioxide diffuses from the blood to the lungs
  3. There is a higher concentration of oxygen in the alveolus that the blood, so the oxygen diffuses (from air) across the wall of the alveolus and into the blood
  4. Blood that has gained oxygen and lost carbon dioxide leaves the capillaries and flows back to the heart. The heart then pumps the blood around the body again to supply the respiring cells
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12
Q

How is the alveolus specialised for gas exchange?

A
  1. Huge number of microscopic alveoli gives the lungs and enormous SA
  2. There is a moist lining for the gases to dissolve in
  3. Alveoli have very thin walls, one cell thick so the gas doesn’t have to diffuse far
  4. Great blood supply to maintain high concentration gradient
  5. The walls are permeable, so the gases can diffuse across easily
    - ALL MAKE DIFFUSION MORE EFFICIENT
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13
Q

How does smoking damage the alveoli?

A

Smoking damages the walls inside the alveoli, reducing the surface area for gas exchange and leading to diseases like emphysema

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14
Q

How does the tar from smoking affect the circulatory system and lungs?

A
  1. Tar in cigarettes damages the cilia in your lungs and trachea
    - These hairs, along with mucus catch a lot of dust and bacteria before they reach the lungs
    - The cilia also help to keep the trachea clear by sweeping mucus towards the mouth
    - When these cilia are damaged chest infections are more likely
  2. Tar also irritates the bronchi and bronchioles, encouraging mucus to be produced which can’t be cleared very well by damaged cilia, this causes smokers cough and chronic bronchitis
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15
Q

How does the carbon monoxide in cigarette smoke affect the circulatory system and lungs?

A
  1. The carbon monoxide in smoke binds to the haemoglobin in your RBC rather than oxygen and so reduces the amount of oxygen the blood can carry
  2. To make up for this, heart rate increase, which leads to increase in blood pressure
  3. High blood pressure damages the artery walls, making the formation of blood clots more likely
  4. This increases the risk of coronary heart disease (e.g. heart attacks)
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16
Q

What is the relationship between smoking and cancer?

A

Smokers are more likely to have cancer because tobacco smoke contains a lot of carcinogens

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17
Q

What is the purpose of the pleural membranes and pleural fluid?

A
  • The pleural membranes create and air tight seal
  • Between the two membranes is a space called the pleural cavity, filled with a thin layer of liquid called pleural fluid, this acts as lubrication, so that the surfaces of the lungs don’t stick to the inside of the chest wall when we breathe
18
Q

How is the airway kept clean?

A

By mucus and cilia

19
Q

Describe inhaled air

A
  1. More oxygen
  2. Less carbon dioxide
  3. Some other gases
20
Q

Describe exhaled air

A
  1. Less oxygen
  2. More carbon dioxide
  3. Some other gases
21
Q

What is respiration?

A

Respiration is the process of releasing energy from glucose, which happens constantly in every living cell

22
Q

What is the type of respiration when there is no oxygen? (Animals) What is the equation?

A

Anaerobic respiration

  • Not the best as glucose is only partially broken down
  • Releases much less energy than aerobic respiration
  • Lactic acid is also produced
  • Lactic acid builds up in muscles, it gets painful and leads to cramp
  • Glucose goes to lactic acid (+ energy)
23
Q

What is anaerobic respiration like in plants?

A

-Glucose goes to Ethanol and carbon dioxide (+ energy) is produced instead of lactic acid

24
Q

What is the type of respiration when there is oxygen? (Animals)

A

Aerobic respiration

  • Most efficient way to release energy from glucose
  • Type of respiration that you are doing most of the time
25
Q

What is the equation for aerobic respiration?

A

Glucose + oxygen –> Carbon dioxide + Water (+energy)

C6H12O6 + 6O2 –> 6CO2 + 6H2O (+energy)

26
Q

What does the process of respiration do? How is energy released from respiration?

A
  • Releases energy in living organisms
    1. Energy is released as chemical energy, to do things like create large molecules from smaller ones e.g. proteins from amino acids and contract muscles
    2. Energy is also released as heat energy which helps to maintain a steady body temperature
27
Q

How can you experimentally measure carbon dioxide production?

A
  1. Soak some dried beans in water for a day or two. They will start to germinate (you should see little sprouts coming out of them). Germinating beans will respire
  2. Boil a similar sized, second bunch of dried beans and this will kill the beans and make sure they cannot respire. The dead beans will act as your control
  3. Then put some hydrogen-carbonate indicator into two test tubes
  4. Place a platform made of gauze into each test tube and place the beans on this
  5. Seal the test tubes with a rubber bung
  6. Leave the apparatus for a set period of time (e.g. an hour)
  7. During that time the CO2 produced by the germinating beans should have had an effect on the hydrogen-carbonate indicator, it will have turned yellow and the control tube hydrogen-carbonate indicator should have stayed orange
    - You can also carry out this experiment with small organisms like woodlice or maggots (the control for these would be glass beads though)
28
Q

How can you measure the heat produced by respiration?

A
  1. Firstly prepare two sets of beans as describd in the experiment above (boil one lot to kill them and soak the other batch in water for a day or two to germinate)
  2. Add each set of beans to a vacuum flask, making sure there is some air left in the flasks (so the beans can respire aerobically)
  3. Place a thermometer into each flask and seal the top with cotton wool
  4. Record the temperature of each flask daily for a week
  5. The beans are well-insulated in the flasks, so when the germinating beans respire and produce heat, the test flask’s temperature will increase compared to the control flask
29
Q

What are the nasal passages?

A

They are warm and clean and add moisture to the air

30
Q

What is the epiglottis?

A

Stops food getting into lungs when you swallow

31
Q

What is the oesophagus?

A

Carries food to your stomach

32
Q

What is the larynx?

A

Voice box

33
Q

What is the trachea?

A

Tube with incomplete rings of cartilage and carries air to lungs, they are lined with cells making mucus, and cells with cilia which move the mucus away from the lungs

34
Q

What does the left bronchus do?

A

Carries air to the lung

35
Q

What does the bronchioles do?

A

Carry air to lungs

36
Q

What are the alveoli?

A

Tiny air sacs adapted for gaseous exchange

37
Q

What is the diaphragm?

A

Sheet of muscle with a fibrous middle part which is domed; it helps make breathing movements and separates the thorax from the abdomen

38
Q

What are the ribs?

A

Bones that protect and ventilate lungs

39
Q

What are the pleural membranes?

A

Thin moist membranes forming an airtight seal around lungs and separating inside of thorax from lungs

40
Q

What is the pleural fluid?

A

Liquid filling pleural cavity and acting as lubrication, so surfaces of lungs do not stick to inside of chest wall