Anatomy
More Anatomy
Respiration
Abnormals
Blood Groups
100

The area at the back of the nasal cavity and oral cavity and before entering the trachea to lungs or esophagus to stomach

Pharynx

100

The tubular passageway for air from just below the larynx to the lungs

Trachea

100

Where does the exchange of gases between the air and blood take place?

Alveoli

100

What is the disadvantage of having a Eustachian tube?

Chronic blockage- otitis media (inflammation of the middle ear- can lead to hearing loss)

100

What determines which blood group a person has?

Antigen(s) on surface of RBCs

200
The largest, shield shaped cartilage of the larynx. What does it do?

Thyroid cartilage supports and protects the vocal cords

200

What determines whether something in the pharynx goes into the esophagus or into the trachea?

The epiglottis

200

How does oxygen move into and carbon dioxide move out of the blood in the alveoli?

Simple diffusion across the respiratory membrane. Partial pressure of oxygen is high inside the alveoli and low in the blood of pulmonary capillaries (vice versa for carbon dioxide).

200

What is a tracheotomy?

Surgical opening of the trachea. Done to allow air to reach lungs when larynx is crushed or something is lodged in the respiratory channels.

200

Which blood group is the universal recipient? Universal donor? Why?

Recipient- AB positive (no antibodies and RH+)

Donor- O negative (no antigens and RH-)

300

The single, larger cartilage where the left and right primary bronchi fork

Carina

300

How many lobes does the right lobe have? What about the left lobe? Why?

Right-3, Left-2, because the heart is on the left side.

300

During restful, quiet breathing, exhalation is usually a passive process accomplished by what?

Muscle relaxation

300

What is the difference between a pneumothorax and a hemothorax?

Pneumothorax- air in pleural cavity

Hemothorax- blood in pleural cavity

300

Can Group A safely give blood to Group AB? Why or why not?

Yes, because Group AB has the A antigen (no anti-A antibodies)

400

What supplies air to the microscopic alveolar sacs?

Bronchioles. Airway contriction/dilation is most significant here and can dramatically increase/decrease resistance to airflow.

400

What is the function of the serous fluid secreted by the pleural membranes?

Pleural fluid:

1. Lubricates between the lung surfaces and thoracic wall

2. Provides surface tension to hold the lungs against the thoracic wall

400

What happens when the diaphragm contracts? What about when it relaxes?

Contracts- inspiration (diaphragm moves downward, increasing size of thoracic cavity)

Relaxes- expiration (diaphram raises upward, decreasing size of thoracic cavity)

400

What function to cilia have in the lungs?

Cilia sweep mucus (full of debris) up and out. Without ciliary activity, coughing is the only way to prevent mucus from accumulating in the lungs.
400

Can Group AB safely give blood to Group O? Why or why not?

No, because Group O has Anti-A and Anti-B antibodies (no antigens)

500

What is the function of the Eustachian tube (aka auditory tube, pharyngotympanic tube)?

To equalize pressure in the middle ear with external air pressure. It is normally flattened and closed, and opens when swallowing/yawning.

500

Which muscles are involved in vigorous, extra deep inhalations? Which muscles are used for forceful exhalation?

Deep inhalation- external intercostals

Forceful exhalation- internal intercostals

500

What does Henry's Law explain? What does Boyle's Law explain?

Henry's Law- the movement of gas molecules from a liquid to a gas or from a gas to a liquid

Boyle's Law- Why/how air moves in and out of the lungs in response to contraction/relaxation

500

Inhaled foreign objects usually end up lodged in the right main stem bronchus (not the left), why?

Because the heart is on the left side, so the left bronchus is curved and objects don't enter as easily. The right bronchus goes straight down, so object can enter more easily.

500

If the mother is type RH- and the fetus is type RH+, is there a likelihood of erythroblastosis fetalis?

Yes