Respiratory Volumes and Capacities
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338920 Match the items given in column I with those in column II and select the correct option given below:

Column IColumn II
A. Tidal volumeP. 2500-3000 mL
B. Inspiratory reserve volumeQ. 1100-1200 mL
C. Expiratory reserve volumeR. 500-550 mL
D. Residual volumeS. 1000-1100 mL

1 \({\rm{A - P,B - S,C - Q,D - R}}\)
2 \({\rm{A - R,B - P,C - S,D - Q}}\)
3 \({\rm{A - R,B - Q,C - P,D - S}}\)
4 \({\rm{A - S,B - R,C - Q,D - P}}\)
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338910 Lungs are made up of air-filled sacs, the alveoli. They do not collapse even after forceful expiration, because of:

1 Inspiratory Reserve Volume
2 Tidal Volume
3 Expiratory Reserve Volume
4 Residual Volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338911 Vital capacity refers to

1 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe in after a forced expiration.
2 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe out after a forced inspiration
3 \({\rm{ERV + TV + IRV}}\)
4 All of the above
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338912 What is the vital capacity of our lungs?

1 Inspiratory reserve volumes plus tidal volume
2 Total lung capacity minus expiratory reserve volume
3 Inspiratory reserve volume plus expiratory reserve volume
4 Total lung capacity minus residual volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338913 Find out the tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.

1 250 litres
2 450 litres
3 360 litres
4 150 litres
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338920 Match the items given in column I with those in column II and select the correct option given below:

Column IColumn II
A. Tidal volumeP. 2500-3000 mL
B. Inspiratory reserve volumeQ. 1100-1200 mL
C. Expiratory reserve volumeR. 500-550 mL
D. Residual volumeS. 1000-1100 mL

1 \({\rm{A - P,B - S,C - Q,D - R}}\)
2 \({\rm{A - R,B - P,C - S,D - Q}}\)
3 \({\rm{A - R,B - Q,C - P,D - S}}\)
4 \({\rm{A - S,B - R,C - Q,D - P}}\)
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338910 Lungs are made up of air-filled sacs, the alveoli. They do not collapse even after forceful expiration, because of:

1 Inspiratory Reserve Volume
2 Tidal Volume
3 Expiratory Reserve Volume
4 Residual Volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338911 Vital capacity refers to

1 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe in after a forced expiration.
2 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe out after a forced inspiration
3 \({\rm{ERV + TV + IRV}}\)
4 All of the above
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338912 What is the vital capacity of our lungs?

1 Inspiratory reserve volumes plus tidal volume
2 Total lung capacity minus expiratory reserve volume
3 Inspiratory reserve volume plus expiratory reserve volume
4 Total lung capacity minus residual volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338913 Find out the tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.

1 250 litres
2 450 litres
3 360 litres
4 150 litres
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338920 Match the items given in column I with those in column II and select the correct option given below:

Column IColumn II
A. Tidal volumeP. 2500-3000 mL
B. Inspiratory reserve volumeQ. 1100-1200 mL
C. Expiratory reserve volumeR. 500-550 mL
D. Residual volumeS. 1000-1100 mL

1 \({\rm{A - P,B - S,C - Q,D - R}}\)
2 \({\rm{A - R,B - P,C - S,D - Q}}\)
3 \({\rm{A - R,B - Q,C - P,D - S}}\)
4 \({\rm{A - S,B - R,C - Q,D - P}}\)
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338910 Lungs are made up of air-filled sacs, the alveoli. They do not collapse even after forceful expiration, because of:

1 Inspiratory Reserve Volume
2 Tidal Volume
3 Expiratory Reserve Volume
4 Residual Volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338911 Vital capacity refers to

1 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe in after a forced expiration.
2 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe out after a forced inspiration
3 \({\rm{ERV + TV + IRV}}\)
4 All of the above
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338912 What is the vital capacity of our lungs?

1 Inspiratory reserve volumes plus tidal volume
2 Total lung capacity minus expiratory reserve volume
3 Inspiratory reserve volume plus expiratory reserve volume
4 Total lung capacity minus residual volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338913 Find out the tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.

1 250 litres
2 450 litres
3 360 litres
4 150 litres
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338920 Match the items given in column I with those in column II and select the correct option given below:

Column IColumn II
A. Tidal volumeP. 2500-3000 mL
B. Inspiratory reserve volumeQ. 1100-1200 mL
C. Expiratory reserve volumeR. 500-550 mL
D. Residual volumeS. 1000-1100 mL

1 \({\rm{A - P,B - S,C - Q,D - R}}\)
2 \({\rm{A - R,B - P,C - S,D - Q}}\)
3 \({\rm{A - R,B - Q,C - P,D - S}}\)
4 \({\rm{A - S,B - R,C - Q,D - P}}\)
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338910 Lungs are made up of air-filled sacs, the alveoli. They do not collapse even after forceful expiration, because of:

1 Inspiratory Reserve Volume
2 Tidal Volume
3 Expiratory Reserve Volume
4 Residual Volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338911 Vital capacity refers to

1 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe in after a forced expiration.
2 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe out after a forced inspiration
3 \({\rm{ERV + TV + IRV}}\)
4 All of the above
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338912 What is the vital capacity of our lungs?

1 Inspiratory reserve volumes plus tidal volume
2 Total lung capacity minus expiratory reserve volume
3 Inspiratory reserve volume plus expiratory reserve volume
4 Total lung capacity minus residual volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338913 Find out the tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.

1 250 litres
2 450 litres
3 360 litres
4 150 litres
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338920 Match the items given in column I with those in column II and select the correct option given below:

Column IColumn II
A. Tidal volumeP. 2500-3000 mL
B. Inspiratory reserve volumeQ. 1100-1200 mL
C. Expiratory reserve volumeR. 500-550 mL
D. Residual volumeS. 1000-1100 mL

1 \({\rm{A - P,B - S,C - Q,D - R}}\)
2 \({\rm{A - R,B - P,C - S,D - Q}}\)
3 \({\rm{A - R,B - Q,C - P,D - S}}\)
4 \({\rm{A - S,B - R,C - Q,D - P}}\)
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338910 Lungs are made up of air-filled sacs, the alveoli. They do not collapse even after forceful expiration, because of:

1 Inspiratory Reserve Volume
2 Tidal Volume
3 Expiratory Reserve Volume
4 Residual Volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338911 Vital capacity refers to

1 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe in after a forced expiration.
2 Maximum volume of air a person can breathe out after a forced inspiration
3 \({\rm{ERV + TV + IRV}}\)
4 All of the above
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338912 What is the vital capacity of our lungs?

1 Inspiratory reserve volumes plus tidal volume
2 Total lung capacity minus expiratory reserve volume
3 Inspiratory reserve volume plus expiratory reserve volume
4 Total lung capacity minus residual volume
BIOXI17: BREATHING AND EXCHANGE OF GASES

338913 Find out the tidal volume (approximate value) for a healthy human in an hour.

1 250 litres
2 450 litres
3 360 litres
4 150 litres