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Monday, 24 March 2025

Welcome to the respiratory system! 🩺

The respiratory system is more than just breathing in and out. It’s your body’s frontline for gas exchange, pH balance, and even defence. So let’s break it down — not just what you need to know, but why it matters.



🧭 What's the respiratory system for?

The respiratory system is more than just “breathing.” Its core job is gas exchange: getting oxygen in and carbon dioxide out, so your cells can survive and function.

But it also: 

✅ Helps regulate blood pH

✅ Plays a role in speech and vocalisation

✅ Helps protect you from inhaled pathogens and particles

✅ Assists in venous return via changes in thoracic pressure

✅ Acts as a metabolic interface — the lungs even activate some hormones (e.g. ACE in the RAAS pathway)

🔍 Core functions to wrap your head around: 

  • Gas exchange: swapping O₂ in and CO₂ out across the alveolar membrane
  • Ventilation vs. respiration: not the same thing! Ventilation = air movement. Respiration = cellular gas exchange
  • Control centres: your medulla and pons are quietly adjusting your breathing all day
  • Defence mechanisms: cilia, mucus, and reflexes (yes, that satisfying cough)
  • Acid-base regulation: the lungs help buffer your blood pH via CO₂ elimination

🧠 Your lungs aren’t just bags of air — they’re an elegant, tightly regulated system.

🏛️ Key structures — from nose to alveoli

✔️ Upper airway: nasal cavity → pharynx → larynx

  • Filters, warms, and humidifies air
  • Traps particles in mucus and directs them away from lungs via ciliary movement

✔️ Lower airway: trachea → bronchi → bronchioles → terminal bronchioles

  • Conducting zone = no gas exchange here!
  • Cartilage disappears and smooth muscle increases as you go down

✔️ Respiratory zone: respiratory bronchioles → alveolar ducts → alveoli

  • This is where the magic happens: thin-walled alveoli surrounded by capillaries allow for diffusion of O₂ and CO₂

🧠 Tip: gas exchange depends on surface area, membrane thickness, and concentration gradients (remember Fick’s Law!)

💨 Ventilation mechanics — how we move air

Breathing is driven by pressure changes in the thoracic cavity:

🫁 Inspiration = active → diaphragm and external intercostals contract → intrathoracic volume ↑ → pressure ↓ → air flows in

😮‍💨 Expiration = mostly passive at rest → recoil of lungs and chest wall

In forced breathing (exercise, asthma, etc.), accessory muscles (e.g. abdominals, sternocleidomastoids) kick in.

💡 Clinical tip: Even mild disruptions in ventilation (e.g. asthma) or diffusion (e.g. pneumonia) can throw off oxygenation — understanding the basic mechanics now helps you connect dots in future pathology, pharmacology, and physiology content.

🧬 Gas exchange and transport

🫁 At the alveoli:

  • O₂ diffuses from alveoli into blood (binds to haemoglobin)
  • CO₂ diffuses from blood into alveoli for exhalation

🩸 In the blood:

  • O₂ is mostly carried bound to haemoglobin
  • CO₂ is carried as bicarbonate (HCO₃⁻), dissolved gas, or bound to proteins

🧠 Respiratory system is closely tied to acid–base balance. A buildup of CO₂ → ↑ H⁺ → respiratory acidosis.

Think: how does your body compensate?

🧠 Neural control of breathing

Breathing is automatic but adaptable.

  • Medulla oblongata sets the basic rhythm
  • Pons fine-tunes it
  • Chemoreceptors in carotid bodies and brainstem detect changes in CO₂, O₂, and pH

🚨 Clinical link: In chronic lung disease (e.g. COPD), patients can lose their central chemoreceptor sensitivity to CO₂ → they rely on O₂ levels instead. Giving too much supplemental oxygen can suppress breathing!

📊 Study tips for first-years

🧠 Focus on understanding, not just memorising: 

  • Trace airflow from nose to alveoli — know the structure and what happens where
  • Compare and contrast ventilation, external respiration, internal respiration, and cellular respiration
  • Be clear on pulmonary vs systemic circulation
  • Get visual — lung anatomy, cross-sections of alveoli, mechanics of breathing

📚 test your understanding, not just your memory

🔍 Big clinical picture – why it matters

In real life, respiratory compromise can show up in everything: 

  • Post-op patients struggling to ventilate
  • Children with bronchiolitis
  • Elderly patients with pneumonia
  • COVID-19, asthma, pulmonary embolism, anaphylaxis… the list goes on. So master the basics now !

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