BIOL 121 Lecture Notes - Lecture 25: Transpulmonary Pressure, Rectus Abdominis Muscle, Intrapleural Pressure

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16 Dec 2020
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For a closed volume of gas, when volume decreases the pressure increases. Inflation of the lungs during inspiration and deflation of the lungs during expiration are brought about by changing the volume of the thoracic cavity. When there is no air flowing in or out of the lungs (in between breaths) intrapulmonary pressure = atmospheric pressure. Movement of air requires a pressure gradient in order to get air into the lungs you need high pressure on the outside and low pressure on the inside. Since you cannot alter atmospheric pressure, you must change the intrapulmonary pressure. Expiration: decreasing the volume of the thoracic cavity by relaxation of the diaphragm & external intercostals, external intercostals: move down & in, diaphragm: moves up. What happens during exercise: your diaphragm just moves down more during inhalation, exhalation is different external intercostals and diaphragm still exhale and relax but obliques and rectus abdominus also contract.

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