5 - Airways Function Flashcards
What happens to the size of the airways as they branch and get to the periphery
They get narrower
Why are the cartilage rings C chaped?
it allows food to pass down the oesphagus with ease
What does the cross section of the airways (trachea) look like?
- cartilage on the outside (cant see a complete C because the rings are offset)
- beneath the cartilage is a layer if smooth muscle
- there are submucosal glands present (that secrete mucus onto the airways surface). The lower part is embedded in the smooth muscle- when the SM contracts, it squeezes the submucosal gland
- the epithelium has ciliated cells and mucus producing goblet cells
Why is there lots of mitchondrion in the epithelium?
the cells are highly metabolically active so they can keep pumping the cilia
How is mucus stored in goblet cells?
in a highly condensed form- as mucin granules
What happens to the mucin granules as they are secreted?
- fuse with apical surface
- combines with water and expands rapidly (up to 100 fold)
What are the functional units of the submucosal glands?
Acini
How do the airway submucosal glands secrete mucus?
- secrete into the collecting duct
- this then moves to the ciliated duct
- the cilia then waft the mucus out of the gland
What are the 2 types of acini in humans?
serous and mucus
What is the arrangement of airway submucosal gland in the human bronchial gland?
there are serous cells peripheral to the mucus cells
- the serous cells produce a watery mucus (containing enzymes)
- the watery secretions wash over the mucus secretions and washes into the collecting duct
What is meant by metachronal rhythm?
- one field of cilia beat and then the field behind it beats
- meanwhile, the first field is on the backstroke
this allows the cilia to move the mucus sequentially along
What is the function of airway epithelium?
- secretion of mucin, water and electrolytes
- movement of mucus by cilia - MUCOCILIARY CLEARANCE
- physical barrier
- production of mediators
What enzyme produces NO?
nitric oxide synthase (NOS)
What are the 3 main functions of airway smooth muscle?
STRUCTURE
- in respiratory disease of the airways (e.g. asthma), you get inflammation and smooth muscle hypertrophy
TONE
- the SM is not entirely relaxed, so it can contract much quicker if something (e.g. food) is inhaled
SECRETIONS
- increases when the mass of smooth muscle increases (asthma also increases the amount of secretions)
- produces lots of cytokines etc, and it changes its function and phenotype
What happens to the amount of secretions when there is inflammation?
- cytokines are produced
- in response to this, NOS gets upregulated
- COX enzymes produce more histoglandins
- Chemokines lead to the recruitment of inflammatory cells
- the smooth muscle then gets involved in inflammotory processes