Airway Anatomy
Breathing Mechanics
Gas exchange and transport
Respiratory defenses
Real-life respiratory
100

This structure is commonly called the “windpipe.”

What is the trachea?

100

This muscle contracts downward during inhalation.

What is the diaphragm?

100

This chemical diffuses from the alveoli into the blood.

What is oxygen?

100

These tiny hair-like structures sweep mucus upward out of the airway.

What are cilia?

100

This structure makes up most of the volume within the lung.

What are alveoli?

200

This flap prevents food from entering the airway when you swallow.

What is the epiglottis?

200

When lung volume increases, pressure does this.

What is decreases?

200

This odorless, colorless gas which binds preferentially with the same binding site on hemoglobin as oxygen.

What is carbon monoxide?

200

This sticky substance traps dust, pollen, and germs in the airways.

What is mucus?

200

This side’s primary bronchus is more likely to trap inhaled objects.

What is the right bronchus?

300

These tiny air sacs are the main site of gas exchange.

What are alveoli?

300

These muscles help with forced expiration.

What are the abdominal muscles and internal intercostals?

300

This substance prevents alveoli from collapsing due to surface tension.

What is surfactant?

300

These immune structures in the throat help trap pathogens.

What are tonsils?

300

Smokers often cough because smoking damages these structures that normally clear mucus.

What are cilia?

400

This structure divides the nasal cavity into the right and left sides.

What is the nasal septum?

400

The______ routes air and food into their proper channels and plays a role in speech.

What is the larynx?

400

This process describes gas exchange between the lungs and blood.

What is external respiration?

400

These cells in the alveoli engulf bacteria and debris.

What are macrophages?

400

This part of the brain automatically controls breathing rate and depth.

What are medulla and pons?

500

The three regions of the pharynx from top to bottom are these. 

What are the nasopharynx, oropharynx, and laryngopharynx?

500

Describes how most carbon dioxide is transported from the body tissue cells to the lungs to be exhaled.

What is a bicarbonate ion in the blood plasma

500

The amount of air still left in the lungs after you try to forcefully blow it all out.

What is residual volume?

500

Breathing through your nose helps because it does this to the air.

What is filters air?

500

The size of the total surface area available for gas exchange within the average human lungs.

What is half the size of a tennis court?

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