BPK 205 Lecture Notes - Lecture 24: Inositol Trisphosphate Receptor, Cyclic Adenosine Monophosphate, Alveolar Cells

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Upper respiratory system: mouth, nasal cavity, larynx, pharynx. Lower respiratory system: trachea, primary bronchi (left/right), bronchioles, lungs. Gas exchange o2 uptake and co2 release. Conditioning inspired air warming and moisturizing. Protection filtering and clearing foreign particles. Bones of spine and rib cage + muscles thoracic cage. Diaphragm dome-shaped sheet of skeletal muscle. Two pleural sacs each surround lung. Right lung is slightly larger than left: right divided into three lobes, left divided into two lobes space for heart. Scalenes, external intercostals and diaphragm used at rest: these muscles contract and the lungs expand air flows in, air rushes in when volume up and pressure down, air expelled when volume down and pressure up. Forceful breathing other muscles are recruited: forcefully inhale sternocleidomastoids, forcefully exhale internal intercostals, abdominal muscles. Pleural sacs are like fluid-filled balloons that wrap around lungs. Pleural membrane several layers of elastic connective tissue and capillaries, and secretory epithelial cells. Layers of pleura held together by pleural fluid.

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