Organs
Breathing
Gas Exchange
Diseases
100

Which organ carries air from the throat to the lungs?

Trachea

100

What happens to the chest cavity during inhalation?

It expands

100

Where does gas exchange take place in the lungs?

Alveoli

100

What happens to the airways during an asthma attack?

They become inflamed, narrowed, and filled with extra mucus, making it hard to breathe

200

What are the tiny air sacs in the lungs where gas exchange happens?

Alveoli

200

During exhalation, what happens to the diaphragm?

It relaxes and moves upward

200

Why do alveoli have thin walls?

So gases (oxygen and carbon dioxide) can diffuse quickly.

200

Why do people with emphysema get short of breath?

Alveoli walls are damaged = fewer, larger sacs = less surface area for oxygen to diffuse.

300

Name the main muscle that helps you breathe

Diaphragm

300

Why do people breathe faster during exercise?

Muscles need more oxygen and produce more carbon dioxide. Faster breathing increases oxygen intake and carbon dioxide removal.

300

Why do alveoli have a large surface area?

To allow more oxygen to diffuse into blood at once.

300

Compare inhaled air and exhaled air in terms of oxygen and carbon dioxide

Inhaled = high oxygen, low carbon dioxide

Exhaled = lower oxygen, higher carbon dioxide

400

Which parts of the respiratory system branch off from the trachea into each lung?

Bronchi

400

If the diaphragm was damaged, why would it be hard to breathe?

The diaphragm is the main muscle for ventilation. Without it, air cannot be pulled in and pushed out efficiently.

400

Explain why diffusion depends on a concentration gradient.

Gases move from high to low concentration. Oxygen moves from alveoli (High) to blood (low), CO2 moves from blood (high) to alveoli (low)

400

What role do cilia and mucus in the trachea play?

Trap dust and germs. Cilia move mucus upward to be swallowed or coughed out.

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