Respiratory tract
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In humans the respiratory tract is the part of the anatomy that has to do with the process of respiration or breathing.
The respiratory tract is divided into 3 segments:
- Upper Respiratory Tract: nose and nasal passages, paranasal sinuses, and throat or pharynx
- Respiratory Airways: trachea, bronchi, and bronchioles
- Lungs: respiratory bronchioles, alveolar ducts, alveolar sacs, and alveoli
The respiratory tract is a common site for infections. Upper respiratory tract infections are probably the most common infections in the world.
Most of the respiratory tract exists merely as a piping system for air to travel in the lungs; alveoli are the only part of the lung that exchanges oxygen and carbon dioxide with the blood.
Moving down the respiratory tract starting at the trachea, the tubes get smaller and divide more and more. There are estimated to be about 20 to 23 divisions, ending up at an alveolus.
Even though the cross-sectional area of each bronchus or bronchiole is smaller, because there are so many, the total surface area is larger. This means there is less resistance at the terminal bronchioles. (Most resistance is around the 3-4 division from the trachea due to turbulence.)
General histology
The respiratory tract is covered in an epithelium, the type of which varies down the tract. There are glands and mucus producing goblet cells in parts, as well as smooth muscle, elastin or cartilage.
Most of the epithelium (from the nose to the bronchi) is covered in pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelial cells. The cilia beat in one direction, moving mucus towards the throat where it is swallowed. Moving down the bronchioles, the cells get more cuboidal in shape but are still ciliated.
Cartilage is present until the small bronchi. In the trachea they are C-shaped rings, whereas in the bronchi they are interspersed plates.
Glands are abundant in the upper respiratory tract, but there are fewer lower down and they are absent from the bronchioles onwards. The same goes for goblet cells, although there are scattered ones in the first bronchioles.
Smooth muscle starts in the trachea, where it joins the C-shaped rings of cartilage. It continues down the brochi and bronchioles which it completely encircles.
Instead of hard cartilage, the bronchi and brochioles have a lot of elastic tissue.
Reference
- Syllabus: Infectious Diseases (http://www.kcom.edu/faculty/chamberlain/Website/lectures/syllabi3.htm) see Respiratory Tract Infections by Neal Chamberlain, PhD. Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine, Missouri, USA