BIOL 102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 4: Thoracic Cavity, Pulmonary Pleurae, External Intercostal Muscles

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8 Jun 2020
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Tidal ventilation: how humans breathe in and out (i. e. tides of the ocean) Water is very viscos humans cannot breathe underwater with tidal ventilation. Mammals = negative pressure breathing: you bring air in by creating a negative pressure in the thoracic cavity relative to the outside: contraction of external intercostals and diaphragm expansion of thoracic cavity. Using intercostals: muscles between ribs : external intercostals: muscles on the outside (in between ribs and on the outside) they contract and bring ribs away from each other increase volume of thoracic cavity. Flat sheet of muscle beneath ribs called the diaphragm will contract (push up) and increase volume of thoracic cavity. At rest pleural cavity retains some negative pressure prevent collapsing some residual air stays in lungs to prevent collapsing. Respiratory pigments/hemoglobin cyclists train at high altitudes and keep blood from high altitudes because that blood has a higher saturation of hemoglobin. Hemoglobin is the main globular-shaped respiratory pigment in blood of invertebrates.

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