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PHYS3

Respiratory System: Ventilation and Lung Mechanics

QuestionAnswer
OVERVIEW OVERVIEW
2 meanings of respiration: Useing oxygen in metabolism and exchange of oxygen and CO2
What is a product of metabolism that is toxic to us? CO2
What are the three functions of the respiratory system? 1. Get oxygen, get rid of CO2, and regulate pH
ORGANIZATION OF RESPIRATORY SYSTEM ORGANIZATION OF RESPIRATORY SYSTEM
Inspiration: Movement of air from outside to airway to alveoli
Expiration: Opposite direction
AIRWAYS AIRWAYS
During inspiration, air passes through the nose of mouth into what structure? What additional role does this structure have? The phyrnx; prevent food from getting into lungs
What does the phyrnx branch into? Go up to the point of bronchioles...ready, go! Phynx--> esophogas (food) lyrnx (air)-->Trachea-->2 bronchi-->bronchioles
CONDUCTING ZONE OF THE AIRWAY CONDUCTING ZONE OF THE AIRWAY
What are the two zones of the airway? Conducting zone and respiratory zone
CONDUCTING ZONE CONDUCTING
What makes up the conduting zone? Trachea, bronchi, bronchioles
Why is there so much branching? To increase sufrace area for air exchange
Say we output 5L of blood as Cardiac Output, how much of it goes to the lungs? ALL OF IT, BABY!!
RESPIRATORY ZONE RESPIRATORY
What are the three components of the respiratory zone? Alveoli, their ducts, and lots of blood
What are alveoli? What do they exchange with? Air containing sacs of gas exchange with blood
How does O2 exchange happen? By what method, I mean? Diffusion
What defense stuff do we have in the epithelial sufraces of the airways? Cilia
What is the function of cilia? Beat bad stuff toward phyrnx and mucos secretions
What is cystic fibrosis and what is it caused by? Pulm disease in whites; caused by problems with mucos lining of lungs
What is a slippery thing between the lungs and thorax? The intrapleural fluid
What are its two functions? Lubricates lungs to keep them together with thorax and deals with pressure changes in lungs
What is neumo thorax? hole in lung-->collapse
What are the five basic steps inolved in ventilation? Ventilation, Exchange of O and C b/w alveolar air and blood, Transport of O and C through heart by bulk flow, Exchange of O and C b/w capillaries and tissues, and Cells use O and produce C
Ventilation: By what mechanism does it happen? Exchange of air b/w atmosphere and alveoli by BULK FLOW
The first exchange happens where by what? Exchange b/w alveolar air and blood in lung capillaries by diffusion
The last Exchange happens by what mechanism and where? Exchange O and C b/w blood in capillaries and tissues by diffusion
VENTILLATION VENTILLATION
BULK FLOW OF AIR BULK FLOW OF AIR
When does bulk flow of air happen? When the pressure in teh alveoli is lower than the atmospheric pressure
What is the flow in lung equation? (Palv - Patm)/Rairway
What is the clinical description of what happens in asthma? It is bronchoconstriction, so you reduce air exchange and decrease flow
What happens to volume in ionspiration? how? Apply boyle's law Diaphragm contracts and increases the volume of the thoracic cage, which decreases intrapleural pressure by boyle's law
Where does the term subatmosopheric apply? What does it MEAN? it makes the intrapleural pressure subatmospheric (meaning that the outside pressure is grater than the inside pressure, so air moves in and lungs expand)
What does the decrease in intrapleural pressure result in? Increases transpulmonary pressure, and makes the lungs expand
Where is pressure difference in the lungs neccessary to drive air flow into teh lungs/ the alveoli
What is the presure in the pleura now? SO? Negative pressure, so air moves in, baby
What are teh sequence of 7 steps that allow inspiration (ventillation) to occur? 1. Intercostal/diaphram contracts 2. Thorax expand 3. Intrapleural prsesure becomes subatmospheric 4. Increase transpulmonary pressure 5. Lungs expand 6. alveolar pressure becomes subatmospheric 7. air flow into lungs
EXPIRATION EXPIRATION
Is expiration a passive or active proccess? What does this mean? Passive; you HAVE to do it
What kind of a process is inspiration then? Active
What is the process of expiration? RElax inspiration muscles to let lungs and chest wall get back to normal size
What does this ation lead to? Compresses alveolar air, raising the pressure and getting air outo f the lungs
If you're excercising, is inspiration active or passive? ACTIVE, otherwise it is passive
What is teh Functional Residual Capacity? The volume of air int eh lungs at the end of an unfored expiration.
What is acting in this case? Only PASSIVe forces of the lungs and chest wall
What are teh lungs vs. chest doing in FCR? They are stretched and are atteping to recoil; but the chest is compressed and attepting to move forward
What does this lead to? Subatmosphering intrapleural pressure
What is transpulmonary pressure? (P alv - Pip)
What is the function of transpulmonary pressure? Force acting to hold lungs open
At pulled chest, do we have a positve or negative transpulmonary pressure? Positive (+)
What happens to the thoracic size in forced contractions? Why? Give example: Decrease size b/c the expiratory muscles are contracting; this is in excercise of the hyplic maneuver
What is the mechanism fo the hymlic manuver? Sqeeze lung, decrease volume, increase alveoli pressure, expire
LUNG COMPLIANCE LUNG COMPLIANCE
What is lung compliance? Change in lung volume produced by a change in transpulmonary pressure
How do you increase compliance? Increase volume per unit pressure
What is the degree of lung expansion proportional to? Transpulmonary pressure
What is comliance determined by? Elastic tissue in lung, and surface tesnion of the fluid lining the alveoli
What does the chest want to do naturally? Expand
What is surfactant? What does it do? From type II epithilial cells of teh alveoli that reduces surface tesnion and increase compliance
What does Air flow equal? (Patm - Palv) / Resistance
AIRWAY RESISTANCE AIR RESISTANCE
What does airway resistance determine? How much air flows into the lungs
What is teh major determinant of airway resistance? Radii of the airway
What are the radii of the airway influenced by? Transpulmonary pressure, mucos accumulation, Ach and histamine, and epinephrine
What do mucos accumulations have a role in? What do they do? Colds, allergies, CF; they vasoconstrict
PULMONARY DISEASE PULMONARY DISEASE
What happens in asthma? Airway smooth muscle contracts, release mucos, which increases airway resistance and impairs breathing
What are the two types of CHRONIC OBSTRUCTIVE PULMONARY DISEASE? Emphysema or chronchitis
What happens in Emphysema? What is a possible cause? Alveolar walls get destroyed, so you can't do gas exchange. Can be caused by self-destruction by lytic enzymes
Chronic bronchotiis is what? Too much mucos made in bronchi
What is in common b/w bronchitis and emphysema? Small airways can be damaged
Created by: talkglitter2486
 

 



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