Anatomy
Airways
Gas Exchange
Breathing
Volumes & More
100

This structure is the common passageway for both air and food, located behind the oral and nasal cavities.

The pharynx

100

Air enters the body here, where it is warmed up before traveling deeper.

The nasal cavity and mouth

100

Tiny air sacs at the end of each bronchiole where gas exchange occurs.

Alveoli

100

This sheet of muscle contracts downward during inhalation.

The diaphragm

100

This lung volume represents a normal resting breath, approximately 500 mL.

Tidal Volume (TV)

200

This airway structure houses the vocal cords and is composed of muscles, cartilage, and elastic tissue.

The larynx

200

These tiny tubes branch from the bronchi and carry air toward the alveoli.

Bronchioles

200

Oxygen diffuses from the alveoli into this surrounding structure.

Capillaries (blood)

200

These muscles lift the ribs and sternum during normal inspiration.

External intercostals

200

This is the maximum amount of air the lungs can hold in total (~5,800 mL).

Total Lung Capacity (TLC)

300

The trachea splits into two of these structures, one entering each lung.

Primary bronchi (bronchus)

300

The inner walls of the trachea are lined with this type of membrane that traps particles.

Ciliated mucous membrane (with goblet cells)

300

Alveolar walls are this many cells thick to minimize diffusion distance.

One cell thick

300

Normal expiration is described as this type of process - no muscles required.

Passive

300

This nonrespiratory movement clears the lower airways.

Coughing

400

The right lung has this many lobes

3

400

These hair-like structures sweep mucus toward the pharynx to be swallowed.

Cilia

400

This substance coats alveoli to prevent them from collapsing.

Surfactant

400

These receptors in the medulla monitor CO₂ and H⁺ levels to control breathing rate.

Central chemoreceptors

400

This lung volume cannot be measured by a spirometer because it never leaves the lungs.

Residual Volume (RV)

500

This double-layered serous membrane surrounds the lungs.

The pleura (pleural membrane)

500

These are the upper vocal folds - they do NOT produce sound. 

False vocal cords

500

A deficiency of oxygen reaching body tissues is called this.

Hypoxia

500

These body structures contain peripheral chemoreceptors that detect low blood oxygen.

Carotid and aortic bodies 

500

Over 98% of oxygen is transported in this form inside red blood cells.

Bound to hemoglobin (as oxyhemoglobin)