Unit 5 Case Study
Unit 5 Case Study
Unit 5 Case Study
CARIS STORY
2
Unit 5 Case Study 1: Caris Story
1. What is the path taken by air molecules into and through the nose?
Nostrils, nasal cavity, internal nares, pharnx, nasopharynx, oropharynx, laryngopharnx
2. List the functions of the nose.
A. warms, moistens, and filters incoming air. B. detects olfactory stimuli C. modifies speech
vibrations and sounds
3. Name the openings into and out the nose.
The external and internal nares
4. What are the functions of the paranasal sinuses?
Produce mucus, serve as resonating chambers for sound, lighten the weight of the skull
5. How does the nose moisten and clean inhaled air before it enters the rest of the
respiratory tract?
Moistens via the mucus secreted by the goblet cells and drainage from the nasolacrimal ducts;
cleans by the mucus trapping dust particles and the cilia moving the mucus and trapped dust
particles toward the pharynx (Jenkins, G & Tortora, G, 2013).
6. What are the superior and inferior borders of the pharynx?
Superior border: nasal cavity; inferior border: larynx
7. How does the epiglottis prevent aspiration of foods and liquids?
By closing over the glottis when swallowing
CARIS STORY
13. If the volume of the cylinder decreased from 1 liter to liter, how would the pressure
change?
It would increase
14. What is the main muscle that powers your breathing as you sit and study your anatomy
and physiology text?
CARIS STORY
Diaphragm
15. Would contraction of the external intercostals increase or decrease alveolar pressure?
Would it cause air to enter or leave the lungs? Would contractions of the internal
intercostals increase or decrease alveolar pressure? Would it cause air to enter or leave the
lungs?
A. decrease B. enter C. increase D. leave
16. Which happens first during inhalation; (a) air enters the lungs or (b) the lungs expand?
Lungs expand
17. Which forces produce the elastic recoil of the thoracic wall and lungs?
The recoil of elastic fibers that were stretched during inhalation and the inward pull of surface
tension due to the film of alveolar fluid (Jenkins, G & Tortora, G, 2013).
18. Would airflow into alveoli be greater with higher or lower compliance of the lungs?
Larger or smaller bronchioles?
A. higher compliance B. larger bronchioles
19. What is a spirometer?
A device used to measure the volume of air exchanged during breathing and measure the
respiratory rate
20. What is the anatomic dead space?
Conducting airways containing air that do not undergo gas exchange
CARIS STORY
21. What is the difference between tidal volume, inspiratory reserve volume, expiratory
reserve volume, and residual volume?
Tidal volume: amount of air inhaled or exhaled with each quiet breath; inspiratory reserve:
amount of air that can be forcefully inhaled above tidal; expiratory reserve: amount of air that
can be forcefully exhaled above tidal; residual volume: amount of air remaining in the lungs after
a forced exhalation (Jenkins, G & Tortora, G, 2013).
22. Explain the principles described by Daltons law and Henrys law.
Daltons law: the total pressure exerted by a mixture of gases is the sum of the pressures exerted
independently by each gas in the mixture. Henrys law: the quantity of a gas that will dissolve in
a liquid is proportional to the partial pressure of the gas and its solubility (Jenkins, G & Tortora,
G, 2013).
23. What causes oxygen to enter pulmonary capillaries from alveolar air and to enter tissue
cells from systemic capillaries?
O2 moves down its partial pressure gradient
24. Which factors affect the rates of diffusion of oxygen and carbon dioxide?
Partial pressure difference of the gases, surface area available for gas exchange, molecular
weight and solubility of the gases
25. How does the partial pressure of atmospheric oxygen change as altitude changes?
Partial pressure of O2 decreases with increasing altitude
26. In which ways is oxygen transported through the blood? Which is the most common
method of transport?
CARIS STORY
CARIS STORY
CARIS STORY
A. acidosis is a condition in which blood pH is below 7.35, alkalosis is a condition in which
blood pH is higher than 7.45 B. acidosis: depression of the CNS through depression of synaptic
transmission; alkalosis: over excitability in both the CNS and peripheral nerves resulting in
nervousness, muscle spasms, and even convulsions and death (Jenkins, G & Tortora, G, 2013).
CARIS STORY
9
Reference
Jenkins, G & Tortora, G. (2013) The Cellular Level of Organization. Anatomy & Physiology
from Science to Life, 3rd Edition. John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Hoboken, NJ.