Applied Pulmonary Circulation and Therapeutics Flashcards
what ways can we measure pulmonary pressure?
- direct with right heart catheterizaiton
or
- indirectly using doppler ultrasound
in a healthy person is pulmonary pressure greater or lesser than systemic pressure?
in health it’s much lower than systemic pressure
does the pulmonary circulation have greater or lesser resistance than systemic circulation?
it has lower resistance (1/10th of the systemic cirulatory resistance)
Do you have to generate the same amount of pressure in the right side of the right as in the left side?
no - the right side of the heart pumps to the lungs which are at the same level and have little resistance compared to systemic circulation. t
Therefore the left side requires far more pressure
pulmonary hypertension implies hypertrophy of what side of the heart?
hypertrophy of the right side of the heart
What is the cardiac output of the left side of the heart?
5L/min
murmers upon inspiration/expiration are indicative of what?
breath in = right sided murmers are louder
breath out = left sided murmers are louder
what drives our need for respiration?
buildup of CO2
how does pulmonary circulation differ from systemic circulation in the event of hypoxia?
pulmonary circulation constricts to shunt blood away from hypoxic areas of the lung - unlike the systemic ccirculation which increases in the setting of hypoxia
- this, theoretically, favors better perfusion to areas which are better ventilated
where does gas exchange occur in the lungs?
ONLY at the alveolar pulmonary capillary interface
which is a single cell/thin wall
what amount of gas exchange occurs in the lungs?
250 ml/min oxygen diffusion from alveoli to blood
200 ml/min CO2 diffusion from blood to alveoli
if capillary filtration exceeds lymphatic absorption, what develops?
pulmonary oedema
what are the different causes of pulmonary oedema?
- Hydrostatic
- increased pulmonary capillary venous pressure due to pulmonary venous stenosis or pulmonary venous hypertension due to raised left atrial pressure
- alveolar membrane permeability increase
- adult respiratory distress syndrome due to permeability problem in the alveoli
- Low oncotic pressure - more often get ascites, lower limb oedema
- Lymph obstruction
what is the normal pulmonary arterial pressure?
25/8 mmHg
What is the difference between primary and secondary pulmonary arterial hypertension?
primary = just hypertension of the pulmonary artery - give vasodilators/phosphodiesterase inhibitors for treatment
secondary = could be pulmonary venous hypertension, pulmonary embolis, pulmonary artery vasoconstriction secondary to hypoxaemia etc- treatment is to cure the underlying condition, thus curing the hypertension as well