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Collection of Respiratory Failure Cliparts (43)
Looking for Respiratory Failure Cliparts? Here you will find a carefully collected gallery of free images in high quality. Each Respiratory Failure Cliparts can be downloaded for school projects, presentations, websites or creative designs. Need a custom image? Try our free image generator. These cliparts are free for personal use. Please read the full terms of use.
Curated clip art focused on respiratory failure, including crisp transparent PNGs and simple vectors suitable for classroom printouts, slides, and web use.
A vivid anatomical rendering of the human lungs, showing bronchial branching and tracheal connection within a semi-transparent torso.
A clean, educational diagram showing the left and right human lungs with visible bronchial branching.
A patient rests comfortably with a well-fitted CPAP mask, demonstrating effective sleep apnea treatment.
A clear anatomical view of the human lungs nestled within the ribcage, with transparent skeletal structure for context.
Simplified anatomical diagram showing the left and right lungs with branching bronchi-useful for understanding airway structure and function.
These animated lungs show how coughing expels mucus-nature’s way of keeping your airways clean and healthy.
This illustration shows a red blood cell experiencing oxygen deficiency and self-administering supplemental oxygen.
This visual guide contrasts healthy airways with those affected by bronchitis, asthma, and pneumonia-and includes a clinical chest X-ray confirming lung pathology.
A clear, educational diagram illustrating ARDS features: clinical signs, underlying causes, arterial blood gas abnormalities, and the hallmark “white lung” appearance on imaging.
A creative red stethoscope arranged to mimic an electrocardiogram (ECG) trace ending in a heart shape-representing life, rhythm, and clinical vigilance.
Beloved characters Pooh, Piglet, and Eeyore appear fatigued beneath a holiday wreath, illustrating the exhaustion associated with respiratory failure.
Demonstrating the head-tilt chin-lift maneuver to maintain an open airway during cardiopulmonary resuscitation.
Side-view diagram of the human respiratory system, illustrating the path air takes from the nasal cavity through the trachea to the lungs.
This diagram shows two key signs of respiratory distress in children: a pale, floppy infant and a child struggling to breathe with persistent coughing.
The NZREM logo creatively integrates medical tools and symbols into the letters “NZ”, paired with bold “REM” to represent resuscitation and emergency medicine leadership.
This diagram compares healthy airways to those affected by asthma, highlighting smooth muscle tightening, wall thickening, and air trapping during an attack.
Simplified anatomical diagram of the human lungs, highlighting the trachea and branching bronchial airways.
A patient with COPD uses portable oxygen while seated on a walker, illustrating common symptoms and comorbidities such as orthopnea, digital clubbing, and cor pulmonale.
Visual comparison of lung ventilation (blue circles) and blood flow (gradient bar) in supine (A-C) and prone (D-F) positions, illustrating gravity’s role.
A cheerful stick figure celebrates completing a tube-based craft project with a blue marker and checkmark.
A labeled cartoon-style diagram illustrating the major components of the human respiratory system, including nasal passages, trachea, and bronchial tree in the lungs.
A clear, educational diagram illustrating ARDS-highlighting symptoms (e.g., dyspnea, tachycardia), causes (e.g., sepsis, trauma), ABG changes, and the hallmark “white lung” chest X-ray finding.
A stylized icon representing clinicians-male and female healthcare providers-emphasizing teamwork and professionalism in medicine.
Classic medical illustration showing the upper airway and bronchial tree-larynx at the top, trachea descending, and bronchial tubes branching into left and right lungs.
Anatomical diagram showing the human lungs, heart, trachea, and major blood vessels in a cross-sectional view.
When your morning cereal hits too hard-this cartoon shows what happens when fiber overload leaves you feeling sluggish and uncomfortable.
This visual comparison shows how smoking transforms healthy pink lungs into diseased, blackened organs-highlighting the urgent need for prevention.
The RT caduceus logo combines the traditional medical symbol with bold red initials to signify respiratory therapy professionals.
Step-by-step illustration of bronchial branching morphogenesis, culminating in the mature bronchial tree and alveolar structures.
Side-by-side comparison showing healthy, expanded alveoli versus collapsed ones in an infant’s lung tissue.
This diagram compares healthy lung structures with those affected by chronic bronchitis and emphysema-the two main forms of COPD.
A stylized representation of human lungs blending atmospheric clouds and lab data-symbolizing the link between air quality, respiratory health, and medical diagnostics.
This diagram compares alveolar epithelial cells: A is a thin type I pneumocyte for gas exchange, B is a cuboidal type II pneumocyte secreting surfactant (yellow sphere), and C shows a capillary (red) adjacent to the alveolar wall.
