EEOB 2520 Study Guide - Quiz Guide: Vital Capacity, Pulmonary Pleurae, Pulmonary Stretch Receptors

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More surface area is respiratory zone than conducting. Type i: gas exchange, water is able to collapse air, which loses surface area. Keeps alveoli open type 1 wouldn"t be able to do job without type 2. Skeletal muscles: don"t think about breathing but control it. Moves bones, because it is not moving our lungs. Pleural sac (indirectly attached to lungs) very thing fluid filled sac. Pariteal pleura: outside, attached the thoracic cavity, and attached to the diaphragm. Visceral pleura: inside, actually attached to the lungs. Coaster and water sticks to glass because water creates a wall, just like pleural sac. If sac is ruptured, if air is allowed to get in the lung will collapse. Taking air using conducting zone to respiratory zone into the blood. Temperature: when things are moved out of range. Volume: issue ( what is volume of room, what about when the door is open) Moves through diffusion, from high to low concentration.