Exercise 1: Anatomy of the Respiratory System

Exercise 1: Anatomy of the Respiratory System

<p> Anatomy & Physiology</p><p>Lab Week 1: Respiratory System Part 1: Anatomy</p><p>Exercise 1: Anatomy of the Respiratory System</p><p>Using the model & your text book, trace the airflow through the respiratory system starting with the external nares. Number the structures in order from 1 through 17.</p><p>____ alveolar duct ____ nasopharynx ____ alveolar sac ____ oropharynx ____ alveolus ____ primary bronchus ____ bronchiole ____ external nares ____ respiratory bronchiole ____ secondary bronchus ____ internal nares ____ terminal bronchiole ____ larynx ____ tertiary bronchus ____ laryngopharynx ____ trachea ____ nasal cavity</p><p>Station 2: Matching structure & function</p><p>Using the cue cards located at your station, match the structure with the correct function and then complete the following:</p><p>______tubular airways that begin the respiratory zone ______connects the laryngopharynx with the trachea ______tube-like structure that conducts air from the larynx to the bronchi ______closes over the glottis during swallowing ______keep the trachea from collapsing ______division of the bronchi that enter bronchopulmonary segments ______last division of the conducting zone ______conducts air from the nasopharynx to the laryngopharynx ______small round sacs where gas exchange occurs ______small conduction airway that serves a lobule</p><p>Station 3: Histology</p><p>Match the type of epithelium with it’s location in the respiratory system & describe it’s function Epithelium Function a) pseudostratified ciliated columnar ______b) simple columnar c) simple cuboidal d) simple squamous ______e) stratified squamous ______Location ____ nasal cavity through nasopharynx ____ oropharynx through larynx above vocal cords ____ larynx below vocal cords through primary bronchi ____ secondary bronchi through tertiary bronchi ____ bronchioles through beginning of respiratory bronchiole ____ end of respiratory bronchiole though alveolus</p><p>ALSO Look at the dissection of the thorax on http://www.anatomy.wisc.edu/courses/gross/index.html</p><p>First 10 minutes Station 4: Part A</p><p>Using the bone models provided, review the following bones associated with respiration</p><p>Bones of the skull Bones of the Thorax Frontal Sternum Maxilla -manubrium Mandible -body Zygomatic -xyphoid process Ethmoid Clavicle Sphenoid Ribs Nasal septum - 7 true Nasal Conchae - 5 false Nasal Meatus - 2 floating Hard palate Cervical & Thoracic Spine</p><p>Part B Using the muscle model, identify & label the following muscles of respiration</p><p>Inspiration Expiration A E B C D 1. Using the cards located at your station and the attached diagram, match the respiratory muscles to their function: ______a) elevates 3rd, 4th & 5th ribs ______b) elevates the sternum ______c) depresses ribs ______d) compress abdominal contents & increases abdominal pressure ______e) elevates 1st & 2nd ribs ______f) elevates ribs ______g) main inspiratory muscle ______h) 2 muscles used in forced expiration ______</p><p>Indicate whether the volume or pressure increases or decreases during inspiration & expiration:</p><p>Volume or Pressure Inspiration Expiration Thoracic volume Intrapleural pressure Lung volume Alveolar (intrapulmonary) pressure</p><p>Station 5: Interaction</p><p>Using your Wiley Plus complete the following 3 exercises:  1. Build an airway  2. Paint the lung  3. The airway You may use the computers in lab </p>

View Full Text

Details

  • File Type
    pdf
  • Upload Time
    -
  • Content Languages
    English
  • Upload User
    Anonymous/Not logged-in
  • File Pages
    4 Page
  • File Size
    -

Download

Channel Download Status
Express Download Enable

Copyright

We respect the copyrights and intellectual property rights of all users. All uploaded documents are either original works of the uploader or authorized works of the rightful owners.

  • Not to be reproduced or distributed without explicit permission.
  • Not used for commercial purposes outside of approved use cases.
  • Not used to infringe on the rights of the original creators.
  • If you believe any content infringes your copyright, please contact us immediately.

Support

For help with questions, suggestions, or problems, please contact us