Академический Документы
Профессиональный Документы
Культура Документы
T Page itle
Hi I am O2 ,you can call me oxygen, and I will be your guide today. I advise you keep all feet and hands inside the ride at all times.
Oxygen Cell
JH
You may be asking, what is the Respiratory system? Well, the Respiratory system is the system that helps you breath in and out, so oxygen (02) can be pumped through your body and carbon dioxide (CO2) can be removed from the blood stream. You must remember that the Respiratory system is made up of many different organs.
Respiratory Intro
JH
Nasal Passage
Here We Go!!!
Tongue Pharynx
Picture Intro
Here is a overview picture of the Respiratory System. Just go to the next slide to see it.
MB
Respiratory Overview
Picture
Bronchus Bronchiole
Left lungs
Ribs
Alveolus
Diaphragm
MB
Welcome
MB
This is where it all begins. This is where the oxygen first enters your body and also where Carbon Dioxide leaves.
MB
Your sinuses also help out with your Respiratory System. They help to moisten and heat the air that you breath.
Air can also get into your body through your mouth/oral cavity but air is not filtered as much when it enters in through your mouth. MB
Pharynx
Nasal Passage
We are here.
Tongue Pharynx
MB
Next we will head down to your pharynx (throat) and your trachea (windpipe). This is where the air passes from your nose to your bronchi tubes and lungs.
MB
Trachea
Your pharynx (throat) gathers air after it passes through your nose and then the air is passed down to your trachea (windpipe). Your trachea is held open by incomplete rings of cartilage. Without these rings your trachea might close off and air would not be able to get to and from your lungs.
MB
Nasal Passage
Tongue Pharynx
MB
Your trachea (windpipe) splits up into two bronchi tubes. These two tubes keep splitting up and form your bronchiole.
MB
The air flows past your bronchi tubes and into your bronchiole. These tubes keep getting smaller and smaller until they finally end with small air sacs (called alveoli). But we will go there later MB
Alveoli MB
Nasal Passage
Tongue Pharynx
Bronchi Tubes Alveoli (air-sacs) Thin-walled blood vessels called We are here. capillaries
MB
Now we will head over to the alveoli and what happens when the air finally makes it down there.
MB
Your alveoli are surrounded by many tiny blood vessels called capillaries.
The walls of your alveoli (and capillaries) are so thin that the oxygen or carbon dioxide can pass through them, traveling right into, or out of your blood stream. MB
Alveoli Picture
Here is a close up picture of your Alveoli and a Capillary surrounding it.
Wall of the air sac
Capillary
MB
Nasal Passage
Tongue Pharynx
We are here. MB
Bronchiole
Alveolus
JH
JH
Chemical change is taking place in cell Red blood cell carrying oxygen Alveolus Contiguous Basal Laminae (Membrane) Capillary
JH
Oxygen
Diffusion
Carbon Dioxide
Oxygen diffuses through the membrane into the blood stream. Carbon Dioxide diffuses through the membrane and enters the alveolus.
* A specialized thin layer of skin that oxygen and carbon dioxide can pass through.
JH
Cool pictures
JH
I n t r o t o D i a p h r a g m
Now we will look at the Diaphragm. You might be wondering, what does the Diaphragm do? The Diaphragm is an important factor in breathing.
JH
Diagram of Diaphragm
JH
JH
1st you need a bottle that you can sacrifice to cut up.
Experiment Instructions
2nd you cut the bottom of the bottle and put a big balloon on the bottom.
3rd get a rubber cork ( make sure it blocks the hole)and put a hole through it ( top to bottom). Insert a thin tube into the cork and place a balloon on the bottom of the tube. 4th make sure the thing is airtight. JH
CO2
Air Passing over the mucus membrane of the nasal cavity is moistened, warmed, and filtered The Pharynx, or throat, is located where passages from the nose and mouth came together.
Inside the lungs the Bronchi branch into small tubes called bronchioles
If one lobe is injured or diseased, the other lobes may be able to function normally
JH
Fun Facts
rest, the body takes in and breathes out about 10 liters of air each minute. * The right lung is slightly larger than the left. * The highest recorded "sneeze speed" is 165 km per hour. * The surface area of the lungs is roughly the same size as a tennis court. * The capillaries in the lungs would extend 1,600 kilometers if placed end to end. * We lose half a liter of water a day through breathing. This is the water vapor we see when we breathe onto glass. * A person at rest usually breathes between 12 and 15 times a minute. * The breathing rate is faster in children and women than in men.
* At
Key Words
Respiratory System- The group of organs in your body that are responsible for taking in Oxygen and breathing out the Carbon Dioxide which is the waste product of cellular respiration. Oxygen-The gas that your body needs to work and function. Carbon Dioxide- The waste product (gas) that is produced through respiration of people and animals. Nose/Nasal Cavity- Where Oxygen first enters your body. Tiny hairs help filter the air and air is moistened and heated by your nose. Your Nose leads into your Nasal Cavity. Mouth/Oral Cavity- Oxygen/air can also enter through your Mouth but it is not filtered. Your Mouth opens up into your Oral Cavity. Sinus- A cavity in the bones of your skull that helps moisten and heat the air that you breath. Pharynx/Throat- Gathers air from your Nasal and Oral Cavities and passes it to your Trachea. Trachea/Windpipe- A tube like pathway that connects your throat to your Bronchi Tubes and lungs. Air passes through it when it travels from the Pharynx to the Bronchi Tubes.
Works Cited
For more information please visit:
http://yucky.kids.discovery.com/flash/body/pg000138.html -Why do you need to breathe? And basic info on parts of the Respiratory system http://www.lung.ca/children/grades7_12/respiratory/index.html -An overview of the parts of Respiratory System http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/body/respiratory.html -A basic look at the Respiratory System http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/body/respiratory_facts.html -Fun Facts http://users.pandora.be/educypedia/education/respiratory.htm -Very detailed info and some animation-Has many other body systems too http://www.bioedonline.org/slides/slide01.cfm?tk=5&pg=2S -Web slides with a little info and good pictures www.geocities.com/medinotes/nasal_cavity.htm -The Nose and Nasal Cavity Human anatomy coloring book
Knowledge
Title Page
Introduction
The Circulatory System is the main cooling and transportation system for the human body The body has about 5 liters of blood continuously traveling through it by way of the Circulatory System In the Circulatory System, the heart, lungs, and blood vessels have to work together The Circulatory System has three different parts: pulmonary circulation (lungs), coronary circulation (heart), and systemic circulation, (the rest of the systems processes).
This organ is what pumps oxygen rich blood, nutrients, hormones, and the other things your body needs to maintain your health, to your organs and (Superior Vena Cava) tissues. From the Body The pulmonary veins you see on the right side of the diagram come from your lungs, where the blood cells collect oxygen. Its then pumped out to the rest of the body through the Aorta (Top). All of the blue sections show blood cells carrying waste, (C02) moving back to the lungs (where the C02 will be replaced by oxygen) through the Pulmonary Artery (Top, blue)
The Heart
Pulmonary Artery (Aortic Artery) To the body
Pulmonary Veins
Valves: (tricuspid valve semilunar (pulmonary) valve, bicuspid (mitral) valve, and the semilunar (aortic) valve
By The Way
Whenever the blood is pumped from one section of the heart another a valve closes behind it preventing the blood from moving backwards.
Pulmonary Vein Aorta Brachial Artery Renal Artery Redial Artery Ulnar Artery Iliac Artery
A red blood cell then travels from the heart through arteries that eventually branch into the bodys vast system of capillaries (microscopic blood vessels which connect arteries and veins), they eventually lead to
The Exchange
Oxy-Rich Blood Cell
When the itty bitty teeny tiny red blood cells pass the desired tissue they.
Tissue
TRANSACT
The oxygen the blood cells are carrying is given to the bodys tissue. And the CO2 (waste) from the tissue is given to the same blood cell to be exhaled.
Tissue
Oxy-Poor Blood Cell
How It Works
Technically the Hemoglobin in the blood (a substance full of iron) attracts oxygen from the lungs. The red blood cell then carries it to the desired tissue. Because this tissue has a high CO2 count the hemoglobin lets go of its oxygen and collects the carbon dioxide. You see the hemoglobin has an affinity for whichever gas has a greater count. Because the tissue has a large amount of built up waste (CO2) the hemoglobin attracts it and then replaces it with oxygen, and vise versa in the lungs.
The oxygen rich blood cells then travel through the capillaries where yet another
Tissue
Dont forget that the Hemoglobin in the blood cells let go of the cells oxygen because of the large CO2 (waste) count in the tissue. Oxygen Poor
Oxygen Rich
Oxygen Poor
Left Atrium
Capillaries carry the blood to Venules that connect to veins and the Veins (wide blood vessels) carries the oxygen-poor blood back to the heart.
Conclusion
As you have learned (Hopefully) the Circulatory System is one of the most important systems in the human body
The image cannot be displayed. Your computer may not have enough memory to open the image, or the image may have been corrupted. Restart your computer, and then open the file again. If the red x still appears, you may have to delete the image and then insert it again.
It is the
only
reason youre still alive today and you can attribute the cooling down, feeding of and protection of your body to it.
So the next time you bust open your leg skateboarding you can thank your Circulatory System for patching you up.
Works Cited
For further information please visit:
works
http://www.medical-art-service.de/assets/images/3_KA_704.jpg -Heart and Leg Pictures http://www.ama-assn.org/ama1/pub/upload/images/446/circulationgeneral.gif -circulation picture http://eduserv.hscer.washington.edu/hubio553/atlas/232.html -arm picture http://adam.about.com/encyclopedia/19387.html -heart picture http://www.tmc.edu/thi/anatomy1.html -detailed views of the Cardiovascular System http://www.tmc.edu/thi/leg.jpg -complex leg picture http://www.med.umich.edu/1libr/wha/circ.gif- diagram of the circulatory system http://images.google.co.id/imgres?imgurl=http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/body/circulatory/bod y_circulation.jpg&imgrefurl=http://www4.tpgi.com.au/users/amcgann/body/circulatory.html&h=369&w =300&sz=23&tbnid=rSdZ_CMJpBYJ:&tbnh=117&tbnw=95&start=123&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dcircul atory%2Bsystem%26start%3D120%26hl%3Den%26lr%3D%26ie%3DUTF-8%26sa%3D -picture of heart valves http://eduserv.hscer.washington.edu/hubio553/atlas/232.html -basic picture of arteries
T E he nd
Go Home