Asthma Flashcards
How do elastic fibres affect the bronchial wall in inhalation and exhalation?
When you breathe in, the bronchial walls open up to let air in and the elastic fibres pull them open. On exhalation the bronchial walls collapse as the elastic fibres relax. This becomes an issues when there’s a lot of mucous or inflammation in the airways like in asthma, copd or cystic fibrosis.
In chronic obstructive lung dx, is it a problem of getting air in or air out?
More of a problem of getting air out as the airways collapse. Air is then trapped in the lungs and that makes it more difficult to take the next breath.
How do people compensate for this difficulty breathing?
Accessory muscle use. The lungs expand - increased lung volume and this causes hyperinflation of the alveoli. Ribs are farther apart and diaphragm is more flat.
What does FVC stand for? What is it’s significance?
Forced Vital Capacity. The amount of air that can be forcibly exhaled from the lungs.
What is FEV1? What is it’s significance?
The amount of air that is blown out of the lungs in the first second.
What happens to FVC and FEV1 with chronic obstructive lung disease?
They are both decreased. A normal FEV1/FVC is 90% and someone with lung dx may have less then 70%.
How does chronic obstructive lung dx also affect RR?
RR is slowed because it’s harder to inhale and exhale.
What part of the lung is affected by asthma?
Small bronchi and bronchioles. Airways have exaggerated tendency to narrow in response to triggers making them hyperresponsive.
What happens to asthma that isn’t well controlled?
The airways remodel and become permanently thickened.
What causes asthma?
Genetic predisposition and environmental factors like allergens, polution, cigarette smoke, child resp infections, and occupational exposures.
What are some triggers for asthma?
allergens, cigarettes, virus, exercise, cold dry air, drugs (nsaids and beta blockers), strong odours, stress, air pollution, irritants, gerd, food additives and preservatives, hormone changes
What are the two types of asthma?
1) Allergic (exposure to allergen)/Extrinsic
2) Non allergic (initiated by airway irritant)/Intrinsic
People can have both forms
What’s different about people with allergic asthma?
They have a genetic predosiposition to devel IgE response to allergens (atopy).
What can you find in someone’s blood work with allergic asthma?
Elevated IgE levels.
What happens in an allergic asthma attack?
Someone gets exposed to an allergen which triggers a lot of allergen specific IgE to be made. IgE that doesn’t get exposed to allergen binds to airway mast cells (airway sensitization). There then is an imbalance of T helper 2 cells to T helper 1 cells.