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Page 1: Airways and Lungs

Airways and Lungs

Sanjaya AdikariDepartment of Anatomy

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Nasal CavityNasopharynx (Oropharynx)

LarynxTrachea Bronchi……….

Upper respiratory tract

Lower respiratory tract

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TracheaPrimary bronchi Secondary bronchi Tertiary bronchi Bronchioles Terminal bronchioles Respiratory bronchioles Alveolar ducts Alveolar sacsAlveoli

L & R bronchiLobar bronchiSegmental bronchi

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Nasal cavity• Hair at the entrance to trap bigger particles • Mucous and serous glands to produce

secretions to trap smaller particles and moisturize the air

• Highly vascular to increase air temperature • Folds on the nasal walls to increase the

surface area • Pseudostratified columnar ciliated

epithelium which traps and moves up the dust particles

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General histological arrangement of the airway

• Mucosa• Smooth muscle layer • Submucosa • Cartilage layer • Adventitia

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Changes in the arrangement• PSCC epithelium in large air ways become simple

cuboidal nonciliated epithelium in small air ways • Frequently seen goblet cells become less frequent

and totally absent in terminal bronchioles • The layer of smooth muscles becomes thicker as

it goes down and becomes maximum at terminal bronchioles

• Serous and mucous glands in submucosal connective tissue becomes less numerous and absent beyond tertiary bronchi

• Cartilage parts smaller in small airways

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Trachea

• Pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium

• Smooth muscle layer almost absent

• Numerous serous mucous glands in the submucosa

• 'C' shaped hyaline cartilage

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Primary and secondary bronchi• Less taller respiratory epithelium

• Smooth muscle layer discontinuous

• Fewer serous and mucous glands

• Few hyaline cartilage plates rather than 'C' shaped ones

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Tertiary bronchi

• Tall simple columnar ciliated epithelium

• Smooth muscle layer continuous

• Very fewer serous and mucous glands

• Few small irregular hyaline cartilage plates

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Bronchioles• Airways < 1 mm in diameter

• Simple columnar ciliated epithelium

• Smooth muscle layer continuous and prominent

• Serous and mucous glands absent

• Cartilage plates absent

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Terminal bronchioles• Structure is as same as the other

bronchioles

• End of the purely conducting portion of the airway Respiratory bronchioles

• Walls contain small number of single alveoli

• Ciliated cuboidal epithelium. No goblet cells

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Alveolar ducts

• Numerous alveolar sacs open into these

• Simple cuboidal nonciliated epithelium

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Alveolar wall• Type I pneumocytes (The squamous cells)

– Forms part of the gaseous diffusion barrier

• Type II pneumocytes – Produce surfactant

• Connective tissue – Reticulin, collagen and elastic fibres with fibroblasts.– Macrophages.

• Blood vessels, mainly capillaries

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Respiratory barrier/Gaseous diffusion barrier

Type I pneumocyte

Common BM

Capillary endothelial cell

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Alveolar pores• Equalize the pressure between the alveoli

• Collateral circulation of air when the bronchiole is obstructed

• Responsible for easy spread of infection eg. Lobar pneumonia

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Pleura


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