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Anatomy and Physiology - Respiratory and Digestive system study guide

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This comprehensive, exam-ready study guide covers everything you need for Anatomy & Physiology 2 Exam 2, with full coverage of the Respiratory System and Digestive System. Content is synthesized from lecture slides, OpenStax Chapters 22–23, and all core study guide topics. The respiratory system section covers functional zones (conducting vs. respiratory), upper and lower respiratory tract anatomy, the full bronchial tree hierarchy with cartilage distinctions, alveolar cell types and surfactant physiology, respiratory volumes and capacities (with a complete spirometry table), ventilation mechanics using Boyle's Law, partial pressure and gas exchange (Dalton's and Henry's Laws), oxygen and CO2 transport in the blood, and central vs. peripheral chemoreceptor control of breathing. The digestive system section covers GI wall layers and enteric nervous system plexuses, the full digestive tract from mouth to large intestine, salivary and gastric secretions (parietal cells, chief cells, G cells), pancreatic enzyme activation and the zymogen cascade, bile production and fat emulsification, small intestine absorption mechanisms including lacteals vs. blood capillaries, hormonal regulation (gastrin, secretin, CCK), hepatic portal circulation, liver and gallbladder function, and large intestine physiology. A dedicated "EXAM TRAPS" section throughout — and a consolidated final trap list — highlights every commonly misidentified concept that professors love to test, including bronchi vs. bronchioles, lung lobes, alveolar cell types, residual volume and spirometry limits, pulmonary artery blood content, and more. Ideal for students preparing for a cumulative A&P 2 exam covering the respiratory and digestive systems.

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A&P 2 — Exam 2 Study Guide (Complete)
Respiratory System | Digestive System
Lecture slides + OpenStax Ch. 22-23 + all study guide topics covered




PART 1: RESPIRATORY SYSTEM - ANATOMY

1. Functional Zones
• Conducting zone: nasal cavity to pharynx to larynx to trachea to bronchi to bronchioles. No gas exchange;
filters, warms, humidifies air.
• Respiratory zone: respiratory bronchioles to alveolar ducts to alveolar sacs to alveoli. Gas exchange occurs
HERE.
• TRAP: Terminal bronchioles = still conducting zone. Respiratory bronchioles = START of respiratory zone.



2. Upper Respiratory Tract
Nasal Cavity
• Lined with pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium (respiratory epithelium)
• Goblet cells produce mucus to trap debris and pathogens
• Conchae (turbinates): increase surface area; warm and humidify incoming air
• Cilia beat toward throat (mucociliary escalator) to sweep debris away


Pharynx - 3 Regions
Region Location Key Facts

Nasopharynx Posterior to nasal apertures, AIR ONLY; pharyngeal tonsil; auditory (Eustachian)
above soft palate tubes; 90 degree turn traps large particles (>10
micrometers)

Oropharynx Soft palate to epiglottis Air AND food; palatine tonsils; connects via fauces
to oral cavity

Laryngopharynx Epiglottis to cricoid cartilage Air AND food; esophagus begins here; larynx
anteriorly


• TRAP: Nasopharynx = air ONLY. Oropharynx and laryngopharynx = air and food.


Larynx
• Epiglottis: elastic cartilage; covers larynx (glottis) during swallowing; prevents aspiration into trachea
• Thyroid cartilage: largest laryngeal cartilage; forms Adam's apple
• Cricoid cartilage: ONLY complete ring of cartilage in entire respiratory tract
• True vocal cords (vocal folds): produce sound as air passes; made of elastic tissue
• TRAP: If the epiglottis is damaged, food and liquid can enter the trachea instead of the esophagus, causing
aspiration and possible pneumonia.


Trachea
• 16-20 C-shaped hyaline cartilage rings keep lumen open

, • Trachealis muscle fills posterior gap; allows esophagus to expand during swallowing
• Lined with respiratory epithelium (pseudostratified ciliated columnar + goblet cells)
• The trachea has: C-shaped cartilage, smooth muscle fibers (trachealis), AND cilia - all three



3. Bronchial Tree Hierarchy
Level Cartilage? Key Fact

Primary (main) bronchi Yes - C-shaped Right: wider, shorter, more vertical - inhaled objects lodge
rings here more often

Secondary (lobar) bronchi Yes - crescent 3 right (3 lobes), 2 left (2 lobes)
plates

Tertiary (segmental) bronchi Yes - crescent Each serves one bronchopulmonary segment; 10 right, 8
plates left

Bronchioles NO - smooth muscle Less than 1mm; pulmonary lobule = tissue ventilated by
only one bronchiole

Terminal bronchioles NO Last of conducting zone; no goblet cells; less than 0.5mm

Respiratory bronchioles NO FIRST of respiratory zone; alveoli bud from their walls;
lead to alveolar ducts


• TRAP: Bronchi = have cartilage. Bronchioles = NO cartilage, smooth muscle only. Classic test question.
• TRAP: Alveoli are NOT part of the bronchial tree. The bronchial tree ends at respiratory bronchioles/alveolar
ducts.



4. Alveoli
• Type I alveolar cells (squamous pneumocytes): cover 95% of surface; primary gas exchange cells;
extremely thin
• Type II alveolar cells (great alveolar cells): cover 5%; cuboidal; secrete surfactant; repair damaged
alveolar epithelium
• Surfactant: phospholipids and proteins; reduces surface tension; prevents alveolar collapse on exhalation.
Absent in premature infants - causes respiratory distress syndrome
• Alveolar macrophages (dust cells): phagocytize debris and pathogens - they REMOVE pathogens, not
secrete surfactant
• TRAP: Type I = gas exchange only. Type II = surfactant secretion AND repair. Don't mix them up.
• TRAP: Alveolar macrophages REMOVE pathogens/debris. Type II cells SECRETE surfactant. These are
two different cell types.


Respiratory Membrane
• Air-blood barrier: alveolar epithelium (Type I) + fused basement membranes + capillary endothelium
• Approximately 0.5 micrometers thick; total surface area approximately 70 square meters
• Thinness allows rapid simple diffusion of O2 and CO2



5. Lungs
• Right lung: 3 lobes (superior, middle, inferior); shorter and wider; separated by oblique and horizontal
fissures
• Left lung: 2 lobes (superior, inferior); cardiac notch to accommodate heart; separated by oblique fissure only
• Visceral pleura covers lung; parietal pleura lines chest wall; intrapleural fluid between them for lubrication
AND adhesion

, • Intrapleural pressure: always NEGATIVE (sub-atmospheric) - keeps lungs expanded against chest wall
• Pulmonary artery: brings deoxygenated blood FROM heart TO lung capillaries
• Pulmonary veins: return oxygenated blood FROM lungs TO heart
• TRAP: Left = 2 lobes. Right = 3 lobes. This is intentionally flipped on many exams.
• TRAP: Pulmonary circulation is the OPPOSITE of systemic - pulmonary ARTERY carries deoxygenated
blood.

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