4 - Disorder of Ventilation Flashcards
What is the relationship between compliance and elasticity of the lungs?
- One up, other down
- Compliance to do with expansion and elasticity with rest
How does lung elastic recoil affect functional residual capacity?
How do bronchioles stay open if they have no cartilage?
Radial traction - surrounding alveoli pull outward and prevent bronchiole collapse on experiation
What is interstitial lung disease?
- Deposition of fibrous tissue in the interstitium, so it gets thicker.
- Group of diseases with a variety of causes but similar clinical features.
- Usually caught too late and irreversible
What effects does intersitial lung disease have on the lungs and why?
- Lower lung compliance due to stiff lungs as collagen fibres less stretchy than elastin
- Elastic recoil increased so lungs are smaller than normal
- Chest expansion reduced
- Inspiratory capacity and vital capacity is reduced
- Less O2 diffusion and more CO2 absorption due to thickening of alveolar walls
What are some signs and symptoms of interstitial lung disease?
Symptoms: shortness of breath, reduced exercise tolerance, dry cough
Signs: tachypneoa, tachycardia, reduced bilateral chest movement, coarse crackles
Restrictive type of ventilatory defect on spirometry
What are some examples of causes of interstitial lung disease?
Can all lead to diffuse lung fibrosis
How can you treat someone with pulmonary fibrosis?
- Supervised structured exercise therapy
- May increase lung compliance by stretching, strengthen accessory muscles and teach people to tolerate dyspnoea
What effect does respiratory distress syndrome have on lung compliance and elasticity?
- Reduces compliance as lack of surfactant so high surface tension
- Collapsed alveoli
- Increase effort to breath so impaired ventilation
What happens to the diameter of the bronchioles in pulmonary fibrosis?
Not narrowed due to outward pull of fibrous tissue keeping bronchioles open
What is emphysema and what effect does it have on the compliance and elasticity of the lungs?
- Increased lung compliance as lungs easier to expand due to less elastin
- Elastic recoil decreased
- Narrowing of airways that is irreversible due to loss of elastic fibres exerting radial traction
- Lungs hyperinflated at rest as loss of elastic recoil (barrel chest)
- Obstructive ventilatory defect on spirometry
What are some symptoms and signs of emphysema?
- Barrel chest due to hyper inflated lungs
- Shortness of breath
- Reduced exercise tolerance
What is the main difference between emphysema due to smoking and emphysema due to A1 anti-trypsin deficiency.
Genetic defect presents at earlier age
Both asthma and emphysema are an example of airway obstructions, what is the main difference between the two?
- Asthma is reversible but emphysema isn’t
- Pulmonary fibrosis and RDS are ventilatory obstructions
What is the mechanism of airway obstruction in asthma?
- Asthma is a chronic inflammatory process which can be triggered by allergic/non-allergic stimuli.
- Inflammation causes the things in red