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00:06 All right, So, um, about a minute ill class starts.

00:11 , Well, it's probably less than since it takes so long.

00:14 kind of a bunch of guys were here wondering three people here. There's

00:18 people online. That's about 25% of entire class showing up on time.

00:24 team. Right now. Yeah, , out of 100 25. So

00:33 , it Z, this is very about this time of year. You

00:37 , most people think Oh, I could teach myself this stuff if

00:39 go listen to the videos at double . You guys are going to get

00:47 . Anyway. I wonder how that like Mickey Mouse speeds. Um,

00:52 you're wondering, your scores are for grade, for your papers. They're

00:56 . I went through all the grades Friday. It takes me about 6

00:59 8 hours to go through everything, is loads of fun. If everyone

01:03 did all their reviews, grades would been up online, probably around

01:07 But because not everyone does it I've got to go figure out why

01:10 missed the reviews. What's missing from reviews on and so forth. And

01:14 have to email students get the grades . So, um, hopefully by

01:19 afternoon, when I get back, everyone's done there. The last little

01:23 of those reviews that are missing, , they do get a penalty for

01:26 , By the way. Um, O So what's that? You wanna

01:32 yourself? OK, eso. So those grades will be,

01:36 coming in really, really shortly. by this afternoon, if not early

01:41 morning or tomorrow morning. So that's that is. And then you can

01:45 see the scores up on blackboard. gonna send an email about plagiarism if

01:50 scores have greater than one or Uh, when you open it up

01:56 you see, um, that's that's greater than one or 2%. All

02:02 . What you want to be doing you want to get all of your

02:06 your values down below 1%. I saw a couple papers that had

02:12 similarity scores that were really, really . And so you're gonna need to

02:17 those by the second round. you're gonna get dinged heavily for

02:22 All right. In some cases, I go through and find that you

02:25 from other people. That's a disciplinary . So just I'm gonna be clear

02:29 it right now. So if you really, really high scores, you

02:33 to deal with those. But I'll emailing you guys out. Another thing

02:37 need to know is you need to track of your own penalties and getting

02:40 email is gonna be coming out. if you turn in your paper

02:42 know that you're getting a penalty, just not gonna be reflected in the

02:46 score that I'm putting on blackboard. again, I've told you this

02:49 Blackboard sucks, right? We all . Blackboard sucks. Okay,

02:54 Um, I can't put in every solitary thing in blackboard, so I

02:59 put in all right. You were two days. You were late.

03:03 days. Alright, you've got points off, so you gotta kinda keep

03:07 of that yourself so you'll get your score and then they'll be emails coming

03:12 specifically about, um, the plagiarism . With that being said, let's

03:19 to the exam material because we have exam on Tuesday next week.

03:26 Alright. we are finishing up with vasculature, so there's, like,

03:31 slides and we're gonna go into In the rest of the the unit

03:34 respiration. And what we're gonna be is retiring these two things together.

03:38 the respiration stuff should go by pretty until we start getting into a little

03:42 of the death stuff. This would a lot more fun if everybody was

03:45 in the classroom. Because I actually a human model, are actually human

03:50 , bring people up and actually show how it all works, which is

03:53 lot more fun than me trying to it, because it doesn't make a

03:55 of sense when you say, and this pulls on that, you're

03:57 saying they're going. I'm want to to sleep, you know? So

04:01 right, so what I wanna do first talk about thes the vascular

04:05 In other words, how do we arterial or resistance? Alright, and

04:11 we're talking about, how do we it bigger and smoke? How do

04:14 make there being more resistance? In words, more pressure or more

04:19 Uh, in response to changes in body, um, bodies activity.

04:24 the gist is we have three different here. I'm gonna meet whoever is

04:29 all that fun stuff. All Sorry about that. Mhm. Here

04:35 go. Thank you. Much easier I can't hear the rustling of little

04:42 cats and small mammals. All so first off, we have local

04:47 and basically all you're basically saying when hear local control, you should say

04:51 cells around the arteries talked to the areas or talk to the artists,

04:57 to the the smooth muscle around the and cause them to contract and to

05:03 . That's and that since what it . So it's basically in response to

05:09 surrounding needs. All right, there's my agenda control. We talked about

05:12 briefly, right? That that when when the pressure inside the vessel becomes

05:16 great, the smooth muscle detects the and actually response, that would be

05:21 agenda. Control sympathetic reflexes. This basically a sympathetic response to ensure

05:27 uh, the arterial blood pressure and where blood being distributed, uh,

05:34 the body's needs. In other uh, basically ensuring that what the

05:39 plan is is actually going forward. right, so this is gonna be

05:43 sympathetic responses. And finally, there's , which we're going to dive back

05:47 again when we get to the Alright, So there's hormones both through

05:52 catacomb means and through a Siris of neural hormones. Um uh, that

05:58 responsible for regulating water, salt balance water. Salt balance, which is

06:04 through what the kidney is doing, what ultimately influences blood pressure of the

06:10 of you guys. Any of you playing on pharmacy? Two of

06:14 All right. What are the Two out of 3. 66% of

06:18 people in class today are planning on to pharmacy school. You know what

06:23 odds of that are? Very All right. So I've got a

06:26 for the two future pharmacists. What the primary drug that you give to

06:32 person who has high blood pressure? , that's one. What does it

06:37 ? Hi. She said hi, . What does HTT do? All

06:42 , the water pill. So it's a diuretic. Alright. Diuretics use

06:47 support of other drugs. What are other drugs? You guys now

06:51 which are engine lockers and beta It good, Alright. You didn't

07:02 them. I mean, I know sitting there going. Why is he

07:06 ? Yeah, yeah. No, , no, no, no.

07:08 OK if you didn't know the You're not pharmacists. You don't have

07:12 know it. Look at that. , people are actually showing up

07:15 You're no longer six of the three just walked into the classroom and you

07:19 were planning on pharmacies. No All right, so we have now

07:23 down. Only 33% of the class now planning on pharmacy, at least

07:27 those attending, uh, in person . All right, we're gonna deal

07:32 those two drugs that you describe the receptor blockers, ARBs and the beta

07:39 deal with these questions right here that major regulators of blood pressure. All

07:44 , that last little thing, the . Okay, so you obviously you

07:47 not need to know those for the . I'm not gonna ask. That

07:50 is not a pharmacy class, but will make a lot more sense after

07:53 go through today. And hopefully in kids. All right. So let's

08:00 with the local control. We have . It's called active. High

08:04 active. High premium basically says we're increase blood flow in response to metabolic

08:09 . That makes sense when you're What do you do? You

08:13 But what do you have to do order to eat? What do you

08:16 to do? You either need to someone that you're hungry. That green

08:22 . I know you guys don't do anymore. Right? Or what you

08:26 is you go to a restaurant and I'm hungry. Give me food.

08:29 that make sense? That's actor In other words, what they are

08:33 see signals that the cells are releasing you can see the signals appear to

08:37 in oxygen, present an increase in dioxide and increase in protons, increasing

08:43 and also increase in general ah similarity the local areas, all those things

08:48 indicators of metabolic activity. If you at that for long enough, you're

08:51 , Oh, yeah, I see when oxygen goes down, carbon dioxide

08:54 up. That means the cells are fuel. So maybe they're talk that

09:01 . And that's exactly what is basically cells cause the vessels to vezo dilate

09:05 bring more blood. With the blood the nutrients that they need in order

09:10 survive. That's active. High Alright, reactive high pre mia is

09:16 response again. If I had all you guys here in class, I

09:20 take a little tiny rubber band or and I'd wrap it around my finger

09:24 talk to you guys and you get watch my finger turned dark purple.

09:28 really, really awesome, right? some of you would get really concerned

09:32 is his finger gonna fall off And what you're doing is you're including

09:37 flow of blood. That's why it purple, right. And all those

09:39 on the opposite side of the river at the end of my finger are

09:43 getting the fuel they need in order survive. So the finger gets darker

09:46 darker and darker and darker, as the blood in that area becomes mawr

09:54 deprived. In other words, you taking more and more oxygen out of

09:57 when I take that rubber band Blood flow is now allowed back into

10:02 finger, right? But what's happening behind that rubber band. You

10:08 those blood vessels are expanding outward, to dilate in response to the loss

10:13 nutrients. It's the same thing as active high pre Mia. But after

10:18 removed over band, you don't return back to normal. Basically, they

10:23 in a dilated state to ensure that is, ah free flow of materials

10:28 they don't know when inclusion is going occur again. So basically, it's

10:32 response to the occlusion, right? would be reactive. And lastly is

10:37 Maya. Jenna got a regulation on agenda. Gotta regulation, as we

10:40 , is basically keep that blood pressure keep that flow more or less

10:45 despite variations in the mean arterial All right. You guys were walking

10:50 a little bit ago, right? you came into the classroom, you

10:53 down. What happened to your blood ? When you sat down, it

10:57 down, didn't it? When you up, what happens? You're already

11:00 a low blood pressure. Your body up, it tries, has to

11:04 blood pressure, ensure that blood circulates the same rate. And that's in

11:08 . What? What's going on That your blood pressure goes up and

11:11 depending upon whatever your activity is. so what it has to do is

11:15 that the blood flow matches what the of the body are, despite the

11:21 that there are changes in pressure. it's gonna constrict and dilate in response

11:25 those changes in blood pressure. And happens at the micro level all over

11:30 body. Kind of cool. All . That's all that basically tells you

11:35 basic construction, basil dilation based upon . And so already you should be

11:40 okay, when I'm dealing with local based upon need. All right,

11:46 what we have is we have a of chemicals that play a role in

11:49 . All right, so the easy to look at this is we're just

11:52 kinda name. We got nitric You guys all heard about nitric

11:55 Yeah, it's fun stuff, Basically, it causes vezo dilation.

11:59 right, So the nearby cells released oxide and it causes vaso dilation.

12:05 . Another one is indo filling. just does the opposite of this vessel

12:09 . So this is how those nearby are communicating with the vasculature temperature has

12:16 role. Shear stress has a Other factors can play a role in

12:21 the vessels whether they constrict or All right, moving on autonomic

12:29 Generally speaking, when you're talking about vessels, you're talking about sympathetic

12:34 All right, there is very, little parasympathetic control, all right.

12:40 generally speaking, what we say is if you have an increase in sympathetic

12:45 , it results in vase a If you have a decrease in sympathetic

12:50 that causes vaso dilation. So The little picture is showing you over

12:55 is the general tonic response that you're inside the So are stimulation of the

13:02 vessel. Alright, So it's basically , Look, I'm always sending a

13:08 and so there's a certain degree of response. There's a certain amount of

13:12 that you're seeing that blood vessel. if I increase that response that I

13:17 vessel constriction if I decrease the amount stimulation, I get Faizo dilation,

13:24 . And so, generally speaking, how you should think of how your

13:28 works right now. The way that reflects work. It's norepinephrine. It's

13:34 on the smooth muscles. So that's new, all right? And it's

13:39 specifically throughout most of the body on one agin ergic receptors. Alright,

13:47 that's the general rule. So you think of Oh, I wanna get

13:51 from my heart to my tissues. traveling through blood vessels that have these

13:55 one receptors. Alright, The only you don't see these apple one is

13:58 the brain. Um, so you have to worry about, you

14:02 making blood go quickly through the But what's interesting in the tissues where

14:06 blood needs to go? We have receptors. We have beta two

14:10 We're going to see this, I , on the next slide. But

14:13 they respond in the opposite direction. right, so what they do is

14:18 the blood gets into those tissues, tissues have caused Bozzo dilation,

14:24 Why do I want visa dilation in tissues? Well, I want to

14:28 down the flow of blood. I'm other words, I want to quickly

14:31 it there. But once it I wanted to take its time through

14:34 tissues so that could deliver the nutrients the cells need. All right,

14:39 the Alfa ones serve as a way speed up by phase of constricting the

14:45 twos cause dilation so that the blood was arriving quickly slows down. That

14:52 sense. All right, so think running. All right? When you're

14:56 , what tissues need blood muscles? . Your muscles. So you don't

15:03 to quickly move the blood passed the . You want the blood to slow

15:07 in the muscles. All right, would be an example. All

15:10 Now, the truth is, there's control can always override sympathetic control.

15:15 what that really means is if there's greater need than what the sympathetic activity

15:20 providing than you can cause Vezo uh, to cause the blood vessels

15:27 become dilated so that blood slows All right, so yeah,

15:34 here's the slide. That basically says . So there's the Alfa one versus

15:38 Beatitudes. Alright, that's all that right there. All right, The

15:42 two hormones and we kind of alluded them a minute ago. Are these

15:48 are going to play a role in blood pressure? All right. The

15:53 one is called vasopressin, right. suppressant comes from the brain, specifically

15:59 posterior pituitary. Alright. The other for his anti diuretic hormone.

16:04 And its job is basically to cause constriction. I'm increasing blood pressure.

16:11 when a th is in circulation, happens is you get vezo constriction.

16:16 in response to a drop in blood or basically a state of blood pressure

16:24 that your body produces a th that can increase blood pressure. So So

16:29 idea is, uh, excuse me . Basically, you're regulating the amount

16:35 water in the body to ensure that holding on the water so your blood

16:39 rises. So when you start losing , your blood pressure would begin

16:43 Is the idea angiotensin two? Also vase, a constrictor. Alright,

16:50 two is actually what we say. made in the lungs. All

16:54 I'm gonna time out here. It's just made in the lungs. It's

16:58 made in every tissue of your But the primary, uh, organ

17:03 the lungs, and we're gonna talk this more when you get to the

17:06 . It also is a vase a . It plays a role in water

17:10 trying to raise blood pressure. All , so when thes two things were

17:13 , it's because you're it's not in like, Oh, my blood pressure

17:17 dropping for this. 30 minutes, my body is in a state of

17:21 blood pressure. In other words, you're becoming dehydrated, for example

17:26 that would be a long term blood loss because I don't have as much

17:30 in my body. So these two would be present to cause you to

17:34 water so that your blood pressure remains . But it also plays a role

17:38 causing vase of constriction, reducing the of volume in your vasculature, your

17:43 volume. Alright. Space in So that's kind of where we were

17:48 finish up on Thursday. And what this is gonna allow us to

17:51 ? I'm gonna allow you any No questions online. That's good for

17:57 questions. No pharmacists, future That's what future pharmacists. Okay,

18:05 . So what we wanna do is want to jump in the respiration.

18:08 right? So when we deal with respiratory system respiratory system, I think

18:13 fairly simple. All right, which good news, because that means the

18:17 is fairly simple. That's exactly the fact. We should see a tick

18:23 in terms of the scores on this exam. All right, As a

18:28 , don't don't give me the cross like that. You're concerned. It's

18:31 , yes, that that should be , yes, doesn't mean don't

18:35 I mean, doesn't mean party the before. It means wait till after

18:39 take the test. Then you can to that. All right, so

18:43 we're trying to dio is we're trying get oxygen to ourselves. We're trying

18:46 get carbon dioxide out of ourselves and out into the atmosphere. But this

18:50 not simply a bellows moving air in out of our lungs, Alright?

18:56 typically, we kind of think of is that there's actually two processes and

19:01 we're gonna be looking at is this one here is called external respiration.

19:05 , there are four steps here in respiration. Alright. Simply put,

19:10 four steps are getting air from the into the lungs, moving that the

19:18 that we need in that air in lungs across into the capital, Aries

19:23 that oxygen down to the cells and exchanging the oxygen and carbon dioxide at

19:29 level of the cells. Those were four basic steps that we're gonna be

19:32 at over the next two days. right, so I don't listen

19:36 but you can kind of say, , this is where I'm trying to

19:40 . Right? I'm trying to get to this cell. How do I

19:42 there? Alright, so Step one way out here, moving from here

19:46 the lungs. Step two is moving from their Step three is traveling

19:51 So there's your step three. Step is moving across into that cell.

19:56 respiration. You've already learned at least billion times. If your biology major

20:01 , remember by one. Got to about cellular respiration, right? Glucose

20:07 . Go. Take go to What do you do? You learn

20:10 again in more detail. Take another in biology. First thing we teach

20:14 is cellular respiration. You should know respiration. I'm not gonna talk about

20:19 . Okay. Is that cool? right. I like that.

20:24 So we could move on to the important stuff. Like pictures of people

20:27 smoke. You know, it snowed El Paso today. My parents sent

20:33 pictures from El Paso. It's snowed night in El Paso. It's gonna

20:38 to 45 tomorrow. You know, ? Today? Yeah. Yeah.

20:50 it never gets cold, but it's be cold tomorrow, just for a

20:54 bit. All right, Now, , these are the non respiratory processes

21:00 the respiratory respiratory system. So it's the organ. A smell is

21:04 nose helps you to make the unique that you make. That's that's

21:09 The reason you sound unique to each is because of the your nasal

21:14 It's also a way to lose This is why I put him down

21:17 breathing out the the vapor. We breathing in a vapor. We just

21:21 see it condense. Right. that's also how we get rid of

21:27 . We process air when we breathe in. We actually, uh,

21:31 that air. We warm that Eso we're adding stuff to it and

21:36 plays a role in defending against inhaled substances. That's why we're wearing masks

21:48 . Just think about that for a bit. All right? In terms

21:51 circulation, we're gonna play a Remember, we've already learned this helps

21:55 Venus return. It serves as a reservoir for the left ventricle.

22:01 it also because rumor you're moving blood the lungs, right? It helps

22:06 modify, uh uh, materials that actually passing through the pulmonary circulation.

22:11 going to see this again when we to the kidney, and we talk

22:13 how we make angiotensin That's not the thing that's being modified. Their your

22:18 play an important role in modifying a of stuff and also plays a role

22:21 acid base balance, which will, , kind of touch on tomorrow.

22:26 what I want to do is I to run through the anatomy. I

22:29 , literally sprint through the anatomy. , so we have an upper and

22:32 lower division. Think of your Your larynx is your voice box.

22:37 are lowering, stands out. So what we call our Adam's apple.

22:41 ? And that's what allows us. the reason our stands out so big

22:44 it gives us our deep voices. when we had those really high,

22:48 voices like my Children have right right? Well, eventually your Adam's

22:53 , your learnings gets large. So gives us that deep bass and makes

22:56 sound cool and big and tough. , ladies, Let's go.

23:01 yeah. Oh, yeah, That's , I'm not gonna do that.

23:06 . All right. So that is boundary line. And so the larynx

23:11 serves as a way to divide these areas. It serves as kind of

23:16 passage, right? And so when closes off, basically that closes off

23:21 allow food when we're swallowing to go the esophagus instead of going down into

23:26 trachea. All right, now, , the above regions, right.

23:32 upper portion of the respiratory system is nose and your mouth and your

23:35 which is a fancy word for saying throat. All right, up to

23:39 lyrics, all right. And then the larynx. That's where your

23:44 which turned into bronc I split, bronc I. And then there's several

23:48 of bronc I and then they become holes and ultimately get down to the

23:53 of the bronchial tree that play a in, um, respiration. And

23:58 this slide just kind of shows you tree in a nutshell, right?

24:02 got bronc. I bronchi the the bronc, I in their multiple

24:07 . The next slide is really going demonstrate this, but this was trying

24:09 show you, like you can see there's different layers there, and then

24:12 get down to the Broncos and there what are called terminal bronchi ALS,

24:17 terminal broncos. They're part of everything it. From the trachea down.

24:21 is the conducting portion. There is gas exchange taking place. It's kind

24:25 like the arteries and the veins where don't have any material exchange across their

24:29 . The bronc I and the terminal cules are simply there as passageways.

24:35 then you get down to the respiratory , where this is the first segment

24:40 respiratory exchange, gas exchange, and , gas exchange is gonna take place

24:45 the Al Vogler sacks and ultimately in al vo life. And so if

24:50 look in your textbook, you have picture which shows you I love

24:54 It's how maney, How many layers there? You don't need to know

24:58 number. I just think it's It's like, Oh, there are

25:02 layers of this tree so it's like out here is the trunk that would

25:07 the trachea. Here's the Bronco and the bronc. I keep branching,

25:10 , and they become bronchial and you right down here and finally you get

25:14 to the respiratory branches. So this the respiratory branches of that entire

25:21 All right, so when you get there, this is what the respiratory

25:24 looks like again. Cartoon version. never red and blue and perfect.

25:29 always grayish pink, and you can't a lot of things from other

25:34 All right, so respiratory broncos gas allowed to pass through. It's still

25:39 passageway, Alright, but it's not that solely serves as the passageway.

25:46 , you have Albiol or ducks, Alvey roller duck you can see in

25:50 little cartoon down here. This is those are finally branching out and they're

25:55 into the alveoli or sacks. You think of an Al veel or sack

25:58 basically a bunch of al viola that bunched together and connected to one

26:02 They're kind of like grapes like to a bunch of grapes, but the

26:06 are actually connected to each other. have passageways between them, all

26:11 And so, um, let's You can kind of see here the

26:15 circles that I'm showing you those those air showing you the interconnection between

26:20 individual Alvito lie all right. And the Al Viola is is absolute in

26:26 the end of it. This is gas exchange takes place. Alright,

26:31 have very, very small diameters. , the values aren't important. It's

26:35 understanding that they're tiny. There's a of them anywhere between three and four

26:40 per lung. And what they do it's here where gas exchange is taking

26:46 . So they're gonna be wrapped around Capital Aries, where that exchange can

26:51 place. They're very, very thin , and there's also surrounded by elastic

26:57 that allow them to contract. In words, think of it as a

27:01 that has a rubber band around So when the ball expands, the

27:05 helps it returned back to its original . Okay, so if you get

27:14 nice and close. This is what album this looks like. All

27:17 You could see the pores. You see how thin the walls are.

27:20 are actually three types of cells that of importance to us. All

27:24 we have the type one LV All right. This is the most

27:28 there. The flattened cells that make the walls. So if we're looking

27:32 this bottom picture right here, that , this is the Al Viola is

27:36 . That sell that you're looking at a type one cell. It's the

27:40 of the al veel. It's very , very thin. Very, very

27:44 Surfaces are not surfacing, but very thickness. So things can pass back

27:49 forth very quickly across those cells. ? And that right there on the

27:54 side, that would be the capital E wall. Alright. The type

27:58 Alvy solar cell is associated with but not inside of its associated with these

28:05 . So here is a type to . Um, trying to see

28:10 That's a macrophage. Trying to make I'm looking at that. No,

28:13 marking that one type two. So should actually be that should be the

28:18 fades. Macro failures are sitting usually the al villas itself. The type

28:24 cells are responsible for creating surfactant. . Surfactant is a ah molecular,

28:32 , mess of secretion that helps the or the elbows from collapsing in on

28:40 . All right. In other it helps to resist against,

28:45 the force of hydrogen bonding that's found water. All right, Al Viola

28:52 . Well, that's what allows us it serves of the first line of

28:55 . So everything you breathe in, , you know, you breathin

28:58 ah, whole bunch of dust all time, right? I mean,

29:03 think there's the It's not true. say over your lifetime, you'll breathe

29:07 like a bucket of dust. I , how do they know And who

29:11 they? Right, you know. you do. If you if you

29:16 looked at watch light beaming down. mean, when you're driving into

29:20 did you see how nasty the air ? I mean, that stuff's going

29:25 your lungs, right? And that Viola that Excuse me, the alveoli

29:30 faith is there to fight pathogens that ending up in your lungs. That's

29:36 first line of defense. All Now the membrane itself very, very

29:41 . The rest of remembering has two to it. I've already alluded to

29:44 . We have the, uh, one valvular are valvular cell. And

29:49 we have here the Indo thallium. . And so the distance across both

29:54 two cells is roughly about 20.5 so half a millimeter. So what

30:00 means is we have a very, small distance to travel. There is

30:05 small thickness between the blood and the . And so this is why we

30:10 gas Exchange is capable of taking Now, if you think about

30:15 what you've done is you've taken a space that would be your Jurassic age

30:20 you divided into two lungs. And what you've done is you've gone through

30:24 you keep dividing that thing smaller and and smaller. So what you've done

30:27 , in fact, is increase the area for gas exchange. So the

30:31 Viola, because you have so many them and because you've made so

30:35 you know, they're so small it the surface area. Now they say

30:40 the surface area is roughly equal to square meters. All right now,

30:45 don't know how big that is, you know, some textbooks, they're

30:48 , Oh, that's Bigas a tennis . I don't know if that's true

30:51 not, you know, I you could go out and measure 10

30:55 , uh, 10 m, so would be 30 by 30 ft.

30:59 know, roughly, you know, pretty large, right? So that's

31:05 effective your lung is, in part terms of surface area. And then

31:09 total volume of air that's able to held inside the lungs is roughly about

31:14 leaders. We'll see you this a bit more details. So if you

31:18 about the lungs, alright, the themselves include those airways. So that's

31:23 conducting zone. That's the Bronco and bronchi holes down to the alveoli.

31:28 got pulmonary blood vessels, so that's veins in your arteries that they'd come

31:32 to the level of the capital All right. You got elastic connective

31:36 , which we mentioned. We didn't about smooth muscle, but you can

31:39 of see here in the cartoon. smooth muscle that surrounds the bronchi

31:43 Right. And then there's no skeletal . All right, Um, and

31:49 a serious memory and that surrounds this . So I want you to think

31:51 a moment because I do this in class. Can you control your

31:56 Can everyone hold their breath? Can you breathe faster? Pant like

32:00 dog for me. Can you do ? Yes. I'm the only one

32:05 did it. They're just not in heads like, yes. Can you

32:09 ? If you can do it, don't want to do it.

32:16 You guys were just chickens. Yeah. Well, we have a

32:21 . This is Don't forget to That's that's actually one of my

32:24 All right. All right. So when you can control something, What

32:28 of muscles responsible for doing that But notice There is no skeletal muscle

32:34 the lung. So how do we the lungs work? Say again?

32:42 . Oh, so there's muscle outside the lungs because that's where the diaphragm

32:47 , right? It separates the abdominal from the thoracic cavity. So it's

32:52 outside of the lungs, acting on lungs that caused the expansion and contraction

32:58 cause us to be able to inhale exhale. All right, so that's

33:03 kind of one of the big key here that we're gonna we're gonna take

33:07 . And trust me, I'll say like six times and you'll know you'll

33:10 the the important muscles. All Now what I wanna do is I

33:13 look at the serious meme brain for moment. All right, this is

33:16 is called the pleura, right? pleura is found on the outside of

33:20 lungs and you can see right here just showing you here is the pleura

33:24 the easy way. Every book has same thing. It's like picture two

33:27 . Picture your fist going into a . Something like that. In

33:30 what it is is that the pleura basically is taking this this two layered

33:37 pushing into it so that you end with the two layers very closely opposed

33:42 one another surrounding the lung. So your lung right there is the visceral

33:49 of the pleura, and right that is the parietal side of the

33:53 . And just for your knowledge, not gonna ask you this on the

33:56 , but just for your knowledge. you see visceral and parietal, it

34:01 to the distance from the near So the visceral is always nearest the

34:08 . The parietal is always further away the organ. Okay? And so

34:13 between those two membranes is a It basically fluid. It's a serious

34:21 And it sits right in there, ? And it's a fluid that minimizes

34:27 . Now, this is where we to have some fun. Alright,

34:29 , take your hands. Put them , even the ones at home.

34:32 I want you to this. Rub together. What do you feel?

34:39 . Okay. So when two things a soft is your hands rub against

34:44 other produces heat. All right. every time you breathe in and

34:50 the lung is rubbing up against the occasion. It's also rubbing up against

34:54 heart. What's it doing? Producing . Okay, now this is the

35:01 part. You are made of What happens when you take heat and

35:07 ? You cook things eso when you cooking. Basically, if you're rubbing

35:15 things together, you're basically cooking your . What this serious fluid does is

35:21 the amount of friction so you have heat, less heat, less cooking

35:25 the lungs. That means your lungs expand and contract without actually cooking

35:31 There's a better way to cook your . That's called smoking. All

35:36 you guys been Texas long enough? you know how to do barbecue?

35:40 do you do barbecue. Smoke the ? That's exactly right. What you

35:44 is you use very, very low about 225 degrees over a long period

35:48 time that causes the fibers to cross and ultimately break down the connective

35:53 And then you get that beautiful smoke in there and you cut that meat

35:56 you just eat it up and you're like this is the best thing

35:58 The rest of the country hasn't figured out yet. Texans figured it out

36:03 we had to do really, really meat and figure out how to make

36:07 crappy me really, really good. right, that's what smoking does.

36:11 right? Smoking is low levels of over long periods of time, smoking

36:18 lungs and what do you get? don't get barbecue. You get something

36:25 nastier. All right. But that's happens to the lungs. That's what

36:28 does. Too long. All respiratory muscles. All right. We

36:34 there found external to the lungs. guys figured that out like the

36:37 All right, They're not acting on lungs. They're acting on the thoracic

36:42 . And so what we're really doing we're changing the shape of the thoracic

36:46 . And because of that pleura, pleura is attached to the lung,

36:50 the pleura is attached to the thoracic . When we pull on the

36:54 we're pulling on the lungs. And you're changing the shape of the thoracic

36:59 to change the shape of the All right, Now, the reason

37:03 talk about this in such detail in is because remember the physiology trying to

37:08 out the why how does it And so it was very exciting when

37:11 figured out how it works. All . But in essence, if you're

37:15 you're standing up and I pull on arm and you're holding somebody else,

37:19 not only pulling on you, I'm pulling on me, somebody else,

37:22 I? And that's in essence. going on is a thorough ASIC.

37:26 is pulling on something that's attached to else. When he pulls onto

37:30 that's something else moves along with Does that make sense with six heads

37:35 the room or not? And I the people online are doing the same

37:38 now. The reason this happens is of two things. All right,

37:43 have a trans mural Grady in, means that there is a difference in

37:47 across the pleura. Alright, those , the fancy words. That's what

37:51 physiologist figured out all right. And reason there's this trans mural grading is

37:55 we have something called an intra plural . All right, I'm gonna put

38:00 in real simple terms. All let's say I get one of you

38:03 stand up here. See, this why we wanted 125. I get

38:06 of you to stand up here and get two of you to pull on

38:09 person standing in the middle. They out in a cross, posed one

38:12 , pulls on one arm, left , one pulls on the right arm

38:15 they pull in opposite directions. What's happen to the person in the

38:20 Are they going to stretch? Not that much, but they are going

38:24 stretch out as far as they will able to go right? It's because

38:28 have an intra. Uh, it's really inter plural, cohesive, But

38:32 haven't internal cohesiveness. Your body doesn't to stretch beyond what it already

38:37 Okay, with regard to the you have fluid inside that membrane.

38:44 those two membranes. Alright, that does not want to expand. And

38:49 when you begin pulling on it, trying to expand something that doesn't want

38:52 expand. And it says no, don't want to do so. I

38:55 to stay the same size, so will expand a little bit. But

38:58 expand my little bit, you're not be able to expand meaning further.

39:02 that means if I'm pulling on one , the other side has to go

39:06 it. Does that make sense? online can't see what I'm doing

39:10 right? So it expands a little . So imagine my two hands parallel

39:15 each other when I pull on one , I can't expand. So both

39:19 moving the same direction on that's what to the two, uh, membranes

39:25 . All right, that's the visceral in the parietal memory. Now,

39:28 gonna see this over and over here the next couple slides. But what

39:31 want to do because I want to when we put a pin in that

39:35 never I can't believe I just said . Gonna put a pin in

39:38 We're gonna come back, talk about exchange for a moment, all

39:43 And then, to understand how and we're gonna be doing this gas Can

39:48 need to understand a couple of Now, I'm not gonna ask

39:51 What does this represent is this boils ? Is Henry's law. No,

39:54 , no. I'm not interested in things. I'm just telling you what

39:57 laws are, but you should understand principles. These air, the important

40:01 , right. First off, atmospheric is a mixture of gasses. You

40:05 learning that ninth grade when you took ? Science? Oh, are

40:09 It was seventh grade. On That seventh grade earth science. Seventh

40:15 . It's too long ago. I remember my teachers, every one of

40:19 ones. I hated the ones I . Never. It was very,

40:23 binary world for me. All Sorry, but you've taken. You

40:28 know what's in air, what's what the gas is in there nitrogen and

40:33 what? Oxygen and and hydrogen and and and and and and a whole

40:41 of things. It's something on the of, like 79% nitrogen on the

40:46 of, like, 20% oxygen. takes us up to 99% and then

40:51 dioxide. We knows there because Lord , we we gotta learn about carbon

40:56 and how it's ruining the planet, ? But it's it's a very small

41:00 , and then after that, it's there's a whole bunch of other gasses

41:03 we don't bother mentioning. Okay, it's a mixture. And so if

41:08 know what's the atmospheric pressure, what's know, when you do any sort

41:12 calculation, what do we call the ? Well, it was part of

41:17 constant. What is it? What's value? Second, what's well,

41:23 me put that what is one atmosphere two millimeters of Mercury 7 60

41:27 Its's here to your brain. It's . You know, if if I

41:31 I put a gun to your head , uh, it would come out

41:35 right. It's kind of like What's ? Number 6.2 times in 2013?

41:39 does that mean? It's avocados It's like it sounds like avocado.

41:44 , that's how you remember it, ? Uh huh. All right,

41:50 we know 760 millimeters of mercury. what What Dalton's law says is

41:56 if you take all of the is that Aaron a mixture of

42:00 They're gonna equal the pressure of the mixture. And so what you could

42:05 is, if you know the percentages each gas right, then you can

42:10 out their pressures as well. All , that's in essence, what dot

42:15 laws? So if I know that 760 millimeters of Mercury for atmospheric

42:20 I know that nitro makes up All I got to do is take

42:24 times 7 60 I can calculate it using Dalton's law, because that's what

42:29 rule says about what the partial pressure nitrogen is in air. No,

42:35 not gonna make you do the all right? That's why we have

42:39 . So if you ever need we can look it up.

42:41 But this is really what it is can see right there. That's in

42:45 , the atmospheric pressure is made up all those gasses, plus a whole

42:49 of others. All right, gas is as a rule will move

42:54 there. Partial pressure, Grady so. Oh, my God.

42:57 You mean that that rule? I about Grady its way back in that

43:00 unit that I was like when he , This is important. I rolled

43:03 eyes. You mean it's coming Yes. Simple things. Move

43:07 Grady INTs Alright. It's a simple . So once you learn it

43:10 you don't ever have to learn it . Partial pressure, chemical,

43:14 Doesn't matter. It's ingredient. You're downhill. All right. You don't

43:19 active transport to do that. these rules apply to gas is dissolved

43:24 liquids. Okay, that's kind of kind of nice. You don't have

43:28 learn something new. When I put gas into a fluid like the

43:32 No same rules apply. So partial of gas is that you have out

43:37 the air. You know, in mixture of gasses is also true in

43:41 in a fluid. Very nice. if I know that there is a

43:48 pressure of a gas in my al and there's a partial pressure of that

43:52 gas in the capital ary all I look and see what the differences and

43:57 could determine the direction which that gas going to travel. That's number one

44:04 two Al. The other area is the same thing as atmospheric air.

44:08 now? You mean I breathe in ? In it changes? Yes,

44:12 reason you changes because you have a of humidity. That's number one,

44:17 . You have more water in your , and it's vapor in the

44:21 And so when you breathe in, gonna mix that vapor with the atmospheric

44:26 . And so what you've done now you've changed. The partial pressure of

44:29 gas is because you've added another gas . The second thing you've done is

44:34 gonna learn here in just a moment when you breathe in your lungs,

44:38 not empty There's actually reserve of air already in your lungs that has is

44:44 undergoing gas exchange. And so when breathe in that air, which has

44:48 20% oxygen and you mix it with air that's stuck in your lungs,

44:52 has. And I'm making up a now 10% oxygen. The partial pressure

44:56 oxygen is not 20 and it's not someplace in between. All right now

45:01 we do is we basically say there's constant for these things. And so

45:05 partial pressure of auction and carbon dioxide more or less a constant inside the

45:10 Viola as a result of you breathing and out. All right, The

45:15 thing you need to recognize is, though I have air still in my

45:19 , there's always gas exchange taking and this is a key thing.

45:23 a big giant star. It doesn't if I'm breathing in breathing out of

45:26 my breath. Gas exchange is occurring across the capital ary um al viola

45:34 . All right, so if I'm my breath, if I have oxygen

45:37 my lungs that the partial pressure is than the partial pressure in the capital

45:42 , oxygen is moving into the capital . If I have carbon greater carbon

45:46 , partial pressure in the blood and breathing in, then that carbon dioxide

45:53 always gonna be exchanging out towards the Vo live. So this is occurring

45:58 of whether you're breathing in, whether breathing out or whether you're holding your

46:01 Now, obviously, if you hold breath long enough, is the partial

46:05 gonna collaborate? What do you Yes, that's That's a good

46:10 Yes, If you hold your breath enough, eventually you'll get a

46:14 all right. And then you pass and then you start breathing again and

46:18 body will take care of itself. play that game, since now we

46:25 calculate these numbers out. So I'm just give you the average is right

46:29 . Not for the purposes of but for the purposes of easy

46:32 When we have to do easy All right. So you could see

46:34 partial pressure of oxygen is about 100 of mercury inside the viola. The

46:40 pressure of carbon dioxide in the lungs in the viola is roughly 40 millimeters

46:45 mercury. Alright, those numbers are off, but it's better to average

46:49 and down just to make our life . All right. There are other

46:54 that influence gas movement and gas transfer again fall under the rules of diffusion

47:02 any sort of substance. So, example, the surface area, if

47:05 increase the surface area, you're gonna increased. Um uh, diffusion.

47:11 we can do that by opening up capital Aries. We're gonna learn more

47:14 this on Thursday. Um, and can increase the elderly space. So

47:19 you breathe in and you're stretching the of that Al Viola, you're actually

47:23 surface area so that you could get exchange of gasses. All right.

47:29 , thickness. The greater the the less diffusion you have,

47:34 So when you have pneumonia, what one of the characteristics of pneumonia?

47:39 now? Well, you can't but there's a reason why liquid.

47:46 , in essence, what you can is you can think of that 0.5

47:50 , uh, distance between the Alvey space and the and the inside of

47:55 capital. Right? But if I a film or a layer of fluid

48:00 the inside of the Al Viola, now increased the thickness through which a

48:05 molecule has to travel. So it more difficult to breathe, really to

48:10 . Gas is it's not really to this to exchange gas is right.

48:14 so what happens is is you become deprived. You have to work harder

48:18 get the oxygen in yada yada Alright, so thickness is important.

48:24 why we keep everything. We try keep things nice and thin.

48:28 Third has to do with the diffusion of the gas is you all have

48:32 chemistry lab at some point in your , right? Remember? Remember how

48:36 chemistry lab was? Yeah, you're just smiling. You love it.

48:40 , you're like I should have been chemistry major. Yeah, All

48:46 All right. Do you remember the ? You remember those books? Did

48:50 see him in the labs? CRC basically what they did is very over

48:56 the last couple years. Is they when they do all the sampling of

49:01 chemical. That's been ever made. they asked questions like, What's this

49:04 point? What's it's what it's freezing is you know what is a molecular

49:09 ? You know, what is they you know all these things. And

49:12 the CRC is a book, and usually have been all the labs where

49:15 like, Here's all the information you about this chemical. It could be

49:19 elements. Could be about molecules. molecules. Gotta, gotta,

49:23 One of the things that they do the diffusion coefficient. They basically

49:27 How long does it take this thing the fuse Across the membrane and

49:31 There's a mathematical formula and they contested stuff. It's based a lot on

49:35 works that fix you Thick used to right. But in essence, what

49:39 boils down to is how well does diffuse? And so different gasses have

49:43 diffusion coefficients. For example, carbon diffuses incredibly well across tissues, whereas

49:52 not so well all right, there's a 20 full difference in their diffusion

49:57 . And so what that means is given the same amount of carbon

50:01 oxygen and you put a membrane carbon would get across faster, right?

50:06 you have a lot more oxygen kind stuck on the other side.

50:10 while this is true, if you at those values I gave you the

50:14 millimeters of mercury in terms of the pressure vs 40 millimeters of mercury partial

50:21 . Those values actually balance things And so what we have is more

50:27 less an equal exchange of those two across the membrane in opposite directions because

50:33 those partial pressures. And we're going see that there's a massive partial pressure

50:37 for oxygen and a lot less, , steep partial pressure difference for carbon

50:44 . And so that's a result of diffusion coefficient, so it allows for

50:49 or less the similar gas exchange because that. So it's the difference of

50:57 between two areas. Is a partial the pressure Grady int. That's nothing

51:01 , and basically, we need to in terms of where are we trying

51:04 exchange across? Well, there's lots different Grady. It's that we're gonna

51:08 looking at the first is the external and the alveoli. All right,

51:13 we need to create a pressure. to get air from the atmosphere into

51:16 lungs. There needs to be a pressure grading between the Al Viola and

51:20 blood that's circulating in our lungs. then we need to have a partial

51:24 . Grady int across from the blood the tissues and in the grand scheme

51:29 things, which will be the first in the next lecture is you can

51:32 about. There's a partial pressure graded the external environment and those cells because

51:36 everything is a middleman between those two . All right, gas flows from

51:41 high pressure. Low pressure. That's hard. You guys remember Boyle's

51:45 That's the one that we all right? So P one p one

51:51 one equals P two V tube. basically what it says is look at

51:53 constant temperature. The pressure of gas in the volume of a container

51:57 That's what the little thing is showing over here. A piston. If

52:00 have a pressure inside there and I upon the piston, I'm basically we're

52:04 increasing the volume of reduced the And if I press on the

52:08 what I'm doing is I'm decreasing the , so I'm increasing the pressure.

52:13 far, so good. Why do care about Boyle's law? Because we're

52:17 treat our lungs the same way we're increase the volume and thus decrease

52:22 When that happens, what they're gonna , it's gonna go in. And

52:26 I press on the lungs and reduce volume, that's gonna increase the

52:30 which is gonna push the air out my lungs. So that's in

52:33 all we are doing. This is respiration. It's so easy because I

52:38 got to think in those terms. I'm acting on the outside of the

52:41 . I'm not. The lungs themselves not doing the work. So what

52:48 pulmonary ventilation? That is the breathing and out? C. You said

52:54 said, Don't forget to breathe. slide is actually you forgot to

52:58 So 30. Don't forget to Breathing is simply moving air between the

53:06 and the Al Viola. We have terms for what we call inspiration.

53:09 air coming in expiration? Is air out of the lungs? All

53:14 those are the two processes. You see these terms as well, inhalation

53:17 exhalation. Those air. Nice synonyms inspiration and expiration. Now, what

53:23 doing right now is what is called breathing. All right, that's that

53:26 breathing that you're doing while you're at . So what you're doing, I'm

53:32 not going through quiet breathing because I'm a lot of talking. But as

53:36 just sitting there, you're breathing in breathing out, breathing in and breathing

53:40 . Forced breathing is when you vigorously as a result of some sort of

53:45 or hard exertion. Uh huh. they could hear me online. I

53:51 see the microphone going up and All right. What did I

53:55 I forced the Aaron and I forced air out. Okay, That would

53:59 forced breathing. Both quiet breathing and breathing. Use the same physiological

54:05 All right, so when you learn , it's very, very simple.

54:08 right. There are nuclei, their nature. They're found in the brain

54:13 . Their job is to stimulate the . Skeletal muscle to cause inhalation.

54:19 right, that's what's gonna be causing inhalation. When those muscles relax,

54:24 that's gonna be X elation. So is autonomic But we also have control

54:29 that as well. All right, response to that oughta gnomic change,

54:36 , that autonomic control. We're changing volume of the thoracic cage. And

54:42 we change the volume, that results a change in the pressure, and

54:47 we change pressure. That's gonna cause to move in the direction of the

54:50 ingredient down the radiant question from Yes, sir. Johnny,

54:58 yawning is a weird thing, and . I'm gonna itching and scratching.

55:05 was better than me doing this. I'm not supposed to touch my face

55:08 and that the rules don't touch my . Um, I don't know the

55:14 that so yawning is a There's actually had a student one year write a

55:21 on what Aon is, and I think the research even knows what Aon

55:27 . It's kind of a auto. it's not an autonomic response. It's

55:33 I'm not gonna go. I can't remember. So where does John and

55:36 in? I don't know. I go look up the papers, and

55:40 they want to write a report for for no. Great, that's

55:44 I'm not giving extra credit that I actually result in another class where they

55:48 to do something. Um, by the way, yeah, What

55:53 the question about yawning? So someone , is where does yawning fit into

55:56 this? The answer is, I know. I thought it was kind

56:00 like temperature regulation S T O Oh, that's the problem is so

56:07 one really knows. And that was was the gist of the research that

56:11 student did for me. And it like it could be this. It

56:14 be that it could be this. could be this other thing. And

56:17 was like five or six different but none of them had. I

56:20 , all of them sounded legitimate, no one was able to prove prove

56:25 that that's what was. And here's funny thing. Yawns are contagious,

56:29 ? Yeah. So why, you it, Z You know, maybe

56:35 just a need to stretch your jaw . There. I caused one.

56:46 faked a yawn, and I got to do it. Yeah.

56:49 so I don't know what the I don't know the answer. That

56:52 but it's a lot of fun to with people to see if you can

56:55 the I did it over a zoom . What's it was just like?

57:00 then you just start watching people on Zoom College. Just start. It

57:03 just there. There. I don't . All right. Anyway, so

57:09 gonna move on. We're gonna sit and look at the different pressures of

57:12 . And this is where the physiology important. First off, atmospheric

57:16 You guys were very good. You the value 760 millimeters of mercury?

57:20 is the standard pressure, right? this is atmospheric pressure. Is pressure

57:25 by the air in the atmosphere? , so that's that's the easy

57:29 Intra pulmonary pressure. It says Inside lungs, that's what that means,

57:33 ? So that pressure is gonna rise fall. It's gonna go up,

57:37 it's gonna go down. But it's going to collaborate with the atmospheric

57:41 right? So the pressure inside the will aquila break to 7 60.

57:46 it's when you're just measuring it. should be at 7 60. When

57:50 changing the volume of the lungs, changing the pressure, but that's going

57:54 quickly return back to 7. The weird pressure is the intra pleural

58:00 . Now, the intra pleural pressure inside that pleural cavity. All

58:04 The pleural cavity, remember, does play a role in gas exchange.

58:08 right, the pleural cavity is there allow the lungs to expand and contract

58:12 response to what we're going to see in just a moment. All

58:16 So what we have here is the inside there is being stretched out because

58:24 visceral and the parietal layers of the are being pulled apart. And so

58:29 pressure in there is slightly lower than atmospheric pressure. All right,

58:34 the reason for this all right, that you can imagine in your body

58:39 have atmospheric pressure, all right? so I'm going to try to draw

58:42 here. Well, I'm gonna Let's , I'm just gonna do use the

58:48 slide to help me. All so you can see a slightly

58:51 Alright. So when you're born, pleura is grown or developed outside of

59:01 lungs. All right? And so come out of your little itsy bitsy

59:04 tiny thing. You're not even even looking. You look kind of like

59:08 lizard, all right? And so your lung is developing, it's actually

59:12 very, very small structure. And closely associated with the surface of the

59:19 Age, all right? And so happens is, as you grow,

59:24 thoracic cage grows away from the all right? And so what happens

59:29 you're actually this. If this is thoracic cage over here, see those

59:32 ribs All right. It's being pulled and further away from the wall of

59:37 lung. All right, so that's lung. And what's happening is is

59:41 it's first pulling on this, and fluid inside that plural sack,

59:47 We've referred to that as that serious , and it's resisting the stretch,

59:53 you're still going to get some So this is pulling in this

59:57 Your lung, which is elastic, to sit where started. It's basically

60:01 pulled towards the center of your So these two things air pulling in

60:05 directions, and so the fluid in is being stretched to its maximum

60:10 That's why there's a negative pressure just if you were to pull on a

60:15 , all right, there's a person gotta give him feet. There's

60:20 there's ahead. If I'm pulling in direction and I'm pulling that direction,

60:24 going to stretch them a little bit her a little bit. But it's

60:28 . It's all being held together, it opposes the stretch in opposite

60:33 And so while I'm being stretched there might be a stretching which drops

60:39 pressure on the inside of me. basically it doesn't wanna be there wants

60:43 be at atmospheric pressure. So that's of what's going on. Is that

60:48 ? My art is terrible. I . All right, so coming back

60:53 , if I'm being stupid thing, I'm being stretched, so here's my

61:01 pleura. This is being stretched this towards the thoracic cage. This is

61:06 stretched in that direction towards the So this is causing a negative pressure

61:13 here about negative four millimeters of and what this is trying to do

61:16 it's trying to return back to its shape. All right, so this

61:23 what's going on is that you already something that's already stretched. And so

61:28 happens is is if I pull even in this direction because this can't be

61:34 any further, it's gonna pull this that direction as well. Well,

61:39 this is my lung right, that I'm gonna make the lung larger.

61:45 that's in essence, what inspiration does I contract the muscles in the thoracic

61:52 and in the diaphragm? What it's do is it's gonna pull on the

61:57 layer of the pleura, and it's pull it away from the lungs because

62:03 can't achieve anymore stretch because of that pressure, right? It doesn't want

62:08 stretch any further. It's going to on the visceral layer of the

62:14 Or, I should say, of pleura, which is attached to the

62:17 , which means it's gonna pull him , and that's going to increase the

62:22 that's going to cause a lungs to . All right, so what?

62:26 is trying to show you down here the bottom and saying, Look,

62:29 wants to be over there. The wall wants to be over there.

62:33 not being allowed because the fluid inside pleura can't be stretched any further.

62:37 that means any movement in this direction any movement in that direction causes the

62:41 of the wall of both walls. , with regard to inspiration, what

62:48 I doing? The diaphragm is a that sits underneath the lungs, is

62:55 divides the thoracic cage or the thoracic from the abdominal cavity. When I

63:00 the diaphragm that causes the diaphragm to downward, which drops the floor out

63:07 the thoracic cage, my thoracic cage larger as a result, right?

63:13 my if my thoracic diaphragm sits here I contracted, it goes down

63:18 the space above it gets bigger. you agree with that? Okay.

63:22 the thoracic cage, I've got All right. When I contract those

63:27 , it causes the thoracic cage toe upward and outward. So when that

63:33 , I've increased the volume of the cage. So when the volume of

63:39 Age increases that pulling on the pleura causes the lungs to move, which

63:44 the volume inside the lungs to increase the volume of the lungs increase what

63:49 to the pressure inside the lungs, drops. And because I want to

63:54 a break with the atmosphere. Air drawn from the atmosphere into my

63:59 That's inspiration, All right. As all that, all those were the

64:04 say now the muscles that do this right, Quiet breathing. I have

64:10 one already. There's a diaphragm. other one is called the external intercostal

64:16 . External means outside. Right? means in between the ribs. All

64:22 , your homework tonight. Go get ribs. Starting to sound good

64:27 , right? Because I want you look at a rib. We'll answer

64:31 question. Your second want you to a rib. Correct? I don't

64:34 if it's a cow rib or a rib. Whatever your favorite rib

64:38 you can't have a tow for If you're vegetarian, there's no such

64:42 . Okay, But you want to a big rib, and I want

64:46 what you do. You can't get mcrib either. Make ribs.

64:49 I don't think they're on sale right . It's not that time of

64:52 right? But it's pressed pork And so no, it doesn't

64:56 But if you get a rib and cut through it from the side you're

64:59 see. There's muscle going one way one side and muscle going the other

65:04 on the other side. Basically, fibers fit like so right there in

65:07 opposite direction, the one on the the both sides. That's the external

65:14 . The one on the inside on inside of the bow is the internal

65:19 . They have different roles, all , so the external intercostal muscle causes

65:24 lungs to expand outward right and The diaphragm drops the floor. It's

65:30 muscle between the stomach or through the the abdomen and thoracic environments or

65:37 Yeah, which the Which layer of ? So the question is, which

65:44 of the pleura do we pull The thoracic cage is, uh,

65:49 layer of the player that's associated with parasitic cages, the parietal, all

65:54 , and then the visceral is associated the viscera. Viscera is anything that's

65:59 your guts, and your lungs are of your guts. All right,

66:03 the visceral layer would always will always against the organs. So that's the

66:08 . So you pull the thoracic cage on the parietal pleura, and then

66:14 causes the movement of the visceral pleura causes the movement of the lungs.

66:19 all of them are moving together as result of the activity of the muscles

66:24 the thoracic cage. Tramp. this is the muscles of quiet

66:32 So obviously that's inhalation. Exhalation is the opposite. All right,

66:39 what you're gonna do is you're gonna those muscles that's going to cause the

66:45 layer, you know, to base basically no longer pulling on the

66:49 So the visceral is wanting to go to its original position. So it

66:53 and brings the parietal back and along it, the thoracic cage, which

66:58 the volume inside the lungs to drop diaphragm when it relaxes. Instead of

67:03 closer to the abdomen, it moves upwards towards the thoracic cavity, which

67:08 the volume inside the thoracic cage. what have you done? Reduced

67:15 increased pressure? What does air It moves out of the lungs and

67:19 Thea atmosphere. Okay, so remember lung wants to be in a comfortable

67:26 . A parasitic cage wants to be a comfortable place. Neither of them

67:29 happy because they're both being pulled in direction they don't want to go.

67:33 so what they're doing is when you muscle contract muscle, they move to

67:39 one or the other. So in X elation, all right, because

67:45 relax the external intercostal because you relax diaphragm, everything returns back to their

67:52 shape. Full, nearest original Alright, So breathing in quiet breathing

67:58 and out requires just those two muscle's of them is breathing in Relax.

68:04 is relaxing those muscles. All That's what this slide is showing is

68:14 the volume changes just so that you have a better vision of that.

68:20 , Force breathing is the same steps we just saw, except that it's

68:25 active. All right, we're going reinforce those same muscles. All

68:29 so we're gonna use some other these air, what we refer to

68:33 the accessory breathing muscles. So it's to cause a greater change. Air

68:37 still gonna move in and out, we're gonna be doing a little bit

68:40 work. All right, so one's terms of forced inspiration. We use

68:44 sternal Clyde, um, asteroids and scale leans We're gonna use muscles in

68:48 backs as well. Um, and in our chest think about when you

68:52 in. All right, everyone breathing hard. What do you do?

68:56 , I'm holding the position. What ? My shoulders went up, didn't

69:01 ? Right. So what did? did it. I pulled on my

69:03 thoracic cage, pulled upward. And that's part of what I'm doing is

69:07 I'm reinforcing what normally takes place, I'm actually accelerating the expansion of the

69:12 cage. All right, so those what those muscles are doing, the

69:18 the two s ones are the most . The stern. A cloud of

69:21 the scale ings. Alright, let's at expiration. All right again,

69:29 yourself. Look yourself in the mirror do this right when I forcibly

69:32 What do I do? Right? you see that? I hunch.

69:37 ? But what's happening here in the ? Does your stomach tighten? You

69:42 out right? What you're doing is tighten your abdominal muscles, which pushes

69:47 the diaphragm to force it in Right? And you're also pulling those

69:52 inward and you're using the internal intercostal to pull on the thoracic cage

69:59 All right, so you're pulling it rather than allowing it toe. Just

70:03 back into place. So the inter the internal intercostal muscles, the abdominal

70:08 become more important. There's other ones there at the bottom of the first

70:11 are the important ones for you All right, so, you

70:16 forced breathing brings in mawr skeletal muscles of the of the of the

70:23 of the chest of the back, in the neck and shoulders as

70:30 Coming around the bend, we're almost now. Your lungs have a volume

70:38 could be measured if you take the lab next semester, which is now

70:43 two credit hours, and it counts graduation. The biology major, You

70:47 have to take one of those other now. Yeah. Can you believe

70:52 ? We passed that this year. like got another new lap I can

70:57 to graduate right. You are required take which left biology majors what you're

71:04 to take. You're required genetics, then you have a choice of one

71:09 three laps being a lab about Kim and now the physiology laugh. Well

71:18 two hours to credit hours down. right. What's that? I don't

71:23 why I suspect everything. I don't . We're actually still in discussion.

71:26 this spring is gonna look like does has no idea what spring is gonna

71:29 like at this point. Which is frustrating, man. Uh, I

71:37 think so. Well, my personal e think that the university will vote

71:43 more again to have the interim grading up. Do I? If I'm

71:48 be one of the fact, remember votes for it now. I think

71:51 wrecking. Uh, many, many . Chance of graduation. Cover that

72:00 boy up. All right. I think Probably just fine, you

72:03 All right, all right. But , so this is a speranza,

72:07 what you do is you breathe into . You know, they have you

72:09 in and out, and you can find the different types of volumes and

72:13 that tells you how well your lungs functioning relative to what it should be

72:17 . So, you know, they've multiple test to figure out what it

72:20 be doing across the mean of regular , and then they can compare you

72:26 that. All right, So if ever if you suffer from asthma,

72:29 probably have to breathe in one of things before they figure this stuff

72:32 All right? So the lung during respirations first off is never full

72:38 Nor is it emptied completely. So other words, we have these reserve

72:42 in there. And so the maximum in a adult male is around six

72:47 and adult females around four leaders, right, And, of course,

72:52 between there, right, you're basically in a normal adult between 272,200.

72:59 matter if you're male or female. basically is telling you your lungs are

73:03 between being full at 2200 miles to miles, so that basically quiet breathing

73:08 about 500 mils per breath, So that's that's normal. All

73:13 now, if you want to, can expand or far forced expiration,

73:18 ? You can push air. that's you could do that down to

73:24 1200 miles, so you still have miles stuck in. And the reason

73:28 still stuck in your lungs Because those bronchial which aren't cartilaginous they're basically kind

73:34 soft. You remember? You need look at those slides about the structure

73:38 little bit. So the broncos have , and so they don't collapse.

73:42 the Brock Hills don't have quite so cartilage, so they're capable of

73:45 And when they collapsed, the heiress behind them. And this is good

73:49 for you because that means you have that's there for exchange. Right?

73:54 while I'm basically I've had all the knocked out of my body because someone

73:58 punched me right? You've ever had happen. That sucks, doesn't

74:02 Your right, You're still alive and through gas exchange because there is still

74:09 in your lungs because of that. right. It ensures that steady rate

74:14 gas exchange. Remember what I I said, star this your breathing

74:17 you're breathing in breathing out, holding breath, gas exchanges taking place.

74:21 these are the four respiratory of volumes title volume is what you're breathing in

74:24 out normally. So in our little here, what you can see right

74:29 there's title volume, all right. this stuff right there. Three amount

74:33 air that you can breathe in above title volume is called the Instant Ori

74:37 volume. That amount of air that breathe out, Um, after normal

74:42 exhalation is called the Expert Ori Reserve . And then whatever stuck in your

74:47 , research referred to as the residual . So that's roughly that 1200 mills

74:52 notice. This can't be directly right? We don't know entirely if

74:57 1200 mils, but it's an estimation what it could be. All

75:01 and you can take thes, and you can start doing some actual

75:05 So what is the normal inspect Ori that's basically equal to the title

75:12 Plus what you can do bring in inspire Torrey Reserve volume. What is

75:16 functional residual capacity? Well, that be what's left in the lungs after

75:22 breathing. All right, so that's excretory reserve volume, plus the residual

75:28 . What's the vital capacity? it's everything that I could breathe in

75:31 out during hard breathing, right? it's the one thing you're basically excluding

75:38 the residual volume, and then what the total lung capacity. Well,

75:41 everything. All right, So that's estimated six leaders versus roughly four leaders

75:50 what we can do. What what do and what people pulmonologist do is

75:54 use these values to determine functionality. so that's kind of what this is

76:01 here refers to this functionality, So there are things like the forced

76:05 Ori volume, which is, you , um, how what's your What's

76:10 vital capacity? That you can expel a za percentage in one second so

76:16 breathe in the you breathe, inasmuch you can breathe out as fast you

76:20 . It's whatever you can do in second, all right. Typically,

76:23 about 75 to 85% of the vital Max story. Voluntary ventilation is basically

76:30 the amount of air that could be and exhaled in one minute. You

76:36 you guys seen the movie the right ? Of course. Not your way

76:38 young. It's awesome. Movie. Academy Awards talked about the space program

76:43 shows John Glenn and the First and they're all breathing into a spare

76:48 ER, and they're basically doing this voluntary. Actually, they're trying to

76:52 vital capacity. So they're breathing and to hold this ball in the air

76:57 a long as they can. And , like in, like, the

76:59 to minute range and every Yeah, else's, like, done in,

77:03 , 30 seconds. You know, have seen that. Yeah. It's

77:08 good movie just for that one All right, These are all

77:12 Just different types of tests. And aren't the only test exists. There's

77:15 of different ones. All right, , I think we got I'm We're

77:20 with surface tension. This is the little bit that I want to go

77:23 with. So I know you guys desperate to get out of here,

77:27 if you if we can get this will be done. All

77:29 So we have two terms that we to be familiar with. The last

77:34 and compliance. All right. On easy way to think about this.

77:37 deals with how much effort is required stretch something. So how easy is

77:41 to stretch it? Alaskans? How is it to return back to its

77:44 shape after it's been stretched All So those are the two things that

77:48 have to overcome. A normal lung simple compliance and simple elastics. It's

77:55 to do both of these things. right, But if you end up

77:58 low compliance, right? How much ? Basically, you have to work

78:03 to get the lung to expand. , so a lung that someone has

78:07 smoking and smoking and smoking. It very low compliance. And so it

78:12 more effort to get the lung to outward. And then once it's stretched

78:16 in a place, it now takes work to push the lung back into

78:20 original shape. So that's why you we have this heavy breathing s because

78:29 working so hard to get with lung do what it needs to do,

78:32 is to stretch and return. All , so you have to work hard

78:36 push the air out is for the . All right, so one of

78:41 things that I want to focus here is on surface tension. We're not

78:45 worry about the amount of last, that should be easy to understand.

78:48 has to do with surface tension. surface tension is simply, um basically

78:54 layer of water that's found inside the . Water is naturally attracted other water

79:00 hydrogen bonding. We all learn Remember, back when? Right.

79:04 so, um, have you have had to clean plates in the

79:09 Right. So if you get two together and they actually when you're cleaning

79:13 you actually sticking together, it takes lot of effort to separate them,

79:17 it? All right, for the never worked in a lab, you

79:19 know what I'm talking about. But , if you could take water serves

79:23 a molecular glue because of hydrogen all right? And so when when

79:29 collapses, All right, here's these want to do. Have you ever

79:31 up a balloon and actually let all air out right? You blow in

79:35 all the air comes out. Did take more work to blow it up

79:37 second time? The answer is, , because there's so much spit inside

79:42 balloon that the inside the balloon walls stuck together and it takes a lot

79:47 work. All right, that's surface . That's that's there as a result

79:52 that. You don't believe me? try it. I mean, go

79:54 some balloons tonight. So when you get your ribs, go get some

79:57 balloons and try this out. All . Now, when this happens with

80:02 to the viola, it's the same . The alveoli are gonna collapse and

80:06 gonna take more work for you Actually the alveoli to expand outward. So

80:11 surfactant. Its job is to prevent from happening. All right, And

80:16 a pulmonary surfactant is a bunch of and proteins. Alright, there's our

80:20 slide. There's two pictures, so can use whatever picture you want,

80:24 ? But basically it's a bunch of and proteins, and what it does

80:27 it gets in between that water and the hydrogen bonding from taking place.

80:33 right, so you don't have to as much work. The other thing

80:37 we have to overcome, it's something called pass ALS law. No,

80:42 , they are not passable. It's , la Vlakplaas. Alright. And

80:48 , what it says is look uh, two different al viola of

80:53 size or two different spheres of different . Theme inward pressure is gonna be

80:58 in the smaller, uh, the structure than in the larger structure.

81:03 , So using this one right this is bigger than that one.

81:08 the inward pressure in the small one greater than the inward pressure there.

81:14 , if I have aired going here air going there, if the pressure

81:18 greater here, what's gonna happen to air in that smaller one? It's

81:23 to go out, and it's gonna to the area of lower pressure.

81:26 so it's going to cause that Al to shrink and so basically what this

81:32 it it reduces the amount of inward . So what this does ultimately increases

81:37 surface area for your lungs? Because if you're smaller, alveoli are always

81:46 air into the larger Alva life, losing much more surface area there than

81:52 gaining here. And so this ensures , uh, that the pressure between

81:59 Albiol are different sizes are equal liberated that you increase ultimately increase your surface

82:04 . All right, so two things increases pulmonary compliance by breaking up that

82:11 hydrogen bonds and also decreases the surface as a result of the law of

82:17 . Basically, that inward pressure makes easier to breathe and a causal under

82:23 contract. All right, so surfactant you breathe. That's what I got

82:31 you today. Wow. I finished , like, two minutes. You

82:35 be impressed. You should pat No, not gonna happen. All

82:41 . Any questions before you guys get of here? No, You just

82:46 just readyto leave. You want you're for the test. I mean,

82:50 like, ready, Ready? Like wanna take the test today.

82:52 I mean, this stuff isn't like you panic, is it,

83:02 You don't know that one either? . You do know Ferris Bueller.

83:05 . Make sure if you haven't seen Bueller's Day off. That's put it

83:09 the list. Important. All right that? Yes. Go ahead.

83:16 , yes, yes. This doesn't to the lecture from today, but

83:19 does pertain to, like, the , like writing assignment. And I

83:24 wondering, I was kind of worried I was checking on some of the

83:28 from the Turn it on. Turn in from the access e yellow exclamation

83:35 . I don't know that. those usually mean those are things that

83:38 graded. And so if they are part of your great officially I'm

83:43 I don't check those. Is that makes sense, In other words.

83:47 , for example, if you turned five reviews on time completed reviews on

83:53 , Um I saw, for that you did that, but I'm

83:56 recording it in the great book because inconsequential, directly inconsequential to your

84:01 So you might be seeing that. if you didn't do it, I

84:06 you today and said, What the you owe me of review? You're

84:11 20 points or 20% taken off your , which basically woke some people up

84:16 , Yeah, yes, absolutely. like so at the beginning of

84:24 Why did said, I'll just reiterate here. I'm going to go

84:28 and I'm gonna put my feet up have a peanut Kalata. No,

84:31 not doing that at all. It be more like a Scotch if it

84:34 anything but What I'm gonna do is gonna I'm gonna make sure that all

84:39 reviews that were missing we're done and gonna submit the I'm gonna submit your

84:44 paper scores back to you hopefully Alright, Because I like to say

84:49 were some missing and I didn't want report a grade that was inaccurate.

84:52 I held back. Everybody's great to this year, so that will.

84:56 should be online here in about I know, I'm just gonna say by

85:00 o'clock, but if it's not, be mad at me. It's because

85:05 I might have not have all my in. All right. So

85:10 Eso and I also I think I my plagiarism was a little high and

85:15 was my mhm. Yeah, so right. So e I mean,

85:22 early on, when I did this , I would I would ding people

85:25 plagiarism issues on the first draft. then I decided that's just e wanna

85:30 you guys not to plagiarize. What want you guys to do is learn

85:34 to do that. So rather I in your email and say you've been

85:37 very naughty boy or girl. Santa's coming to visit you fix it for

85:41 next time. Otherwise it's gonna be . So if you if you're if

85:47 plagiarism is high, you're not getting . You're just getting chastised and then

85:52 need Thio take care of business for second draft. Correct? You're

85:59 Anyone else got any questions? They're logging out. All right, I'm

86:02 go ahead and hit. Stop, we'll save everything here and get everything

86:06 . You guys have a great

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