BIOLOGY



Respiration




In biochemistry, respiration may refer to:

  • Cellular respiration, the process in which the chemical bonds of energy-rich molecules such as glucose are converted into energy usable for life processes Anaerobic respiration, a process that allows respiration without use of oxygen
  • Plant respiration, the enzymatic oxidation of substrates in plants, leading to the release of carbon dioxide respiration.

In physiology, respiration may refer to :

  • Respiration (physiology), the process by which multicellular organisms capture and excrete the gaseous fuel and waste of cellular respiration, absorbing oxygen and disposing of carbon dioxide.
  • Aquatic respiration, the process whereby an aquatic animal obtains oxygen from water
  • External respiration, the process by which gases are exchanged between the atmosphere and the pulmonary loop of circulation
  • Muscles of respiration
  • Respiratory system of humans and other mammals
  • Respiratory tract in humans is the part of the anatomy that has to do with the process of (physiological) respiration
  • Respiratory rate
  • Agonal respiration
  • Apneustic respirations
  • Cheyne-Stokes respiration
  • Biot's respiration
  • Respiratory arrest, the cessation of the normal tidal flow of the lungs due to paralysis of the diaphragm
  • Hypoventilation (also known as respiratory depression) occurs when ventilation is inadequate to perform needed gas exchange
  • Inspiratory paroxysmal respiration (also known as "reverse sneezing"), a phenomenon observed in dogs (Especially small dogs)

Other definition of Respiration:

May also mean the chemistry of producing energy from food, in the cells themselves.
Medical devices involving respiration include:

  • Respiratory therapy or Inhalation therapy, the assessment and treatment of respiratory and cardiovascular pathologies
  • Artificial respiration
  • Respirator

Other uses include:

Carbon respiration, a phrase used in combination with carbon storage to calculate the amount of carbon (as CO2) flux occurring in the atmosphere through the various processes that add and subtract atmospheric carbon

Respiration rate, a parameter which is used in ecological and agronomical modelling