Asthma physiology and breathing control (physiology) Flashcards

1
Q

What is asthma

A

A comyraction of the airway smooth muscle

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2
Q

What causes asthma

A
Exposure to allergens: 
Pollen 
Dust mites : poo, cast skins and secretions
Mould spores
Respiratory infections
Pollutants (smoke)
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3
Q

What happens when q person with asthma breathes in dust

A

An allergic reaction, the production of IgE antibody and inflammation. This is followed by constriction of the airways

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4
Q

How do we treat asthma

A
  1. Bronchodilation

2. Decrease inflammation

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5
Q

Give an example of a type of bronchodilator and explain how it works
(Acute)

A

B²-adrenergic receptor agonists
- mimic the actions of epinephrine (adrenaline)
- activate adenylate cyclase
- this increases cyclic AMP (cAMP) in the cell
- leading to smooth muscle relaxation
Example: salbutamol

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6
Q

Give another example of a type of bronchodilator and explain how it works

(Longer term)

A
Phosphodiesterase inhibitors (eg xanthines - theophylline)
Inhinbit the breakdown of cAMP
Helps to maintain smooth muscle relaxation
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7
Q

Which asthma drugs decrease inflammation

A

Corticosteroids (eg beclometasone)

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8
Q

Which cytokines lead to inflammation in the airway epithelium

A

Interleukin 1 beta and tumor necrosis factor alpha

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9
Q

Explain the location of glucocorticoid receptors

A

In the cell cytoplasm bound by heat shock proteins

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10
Q

Explain the mechanism of beclometasone

A

It binds to the glucocorticoid receptor leading to the heat shock proteins dissociating. The drug receptors complex will then move to the nucleus. In the nucleus, the complex binds to the cytokine genes preventing transcription, reducing vytokine production and hence inflammation

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11
Q

What is omalizumab (Xoliar)

A

A specialist asthma treatment. Its a monoclonal antibody that binds to the Fč region of IgE. This prevents IgE from binding to the receptors of mast cells, basophils and dendritic cells reducing the production of inflammatory compounds

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12
Q

Which 3 chemicals cause inflammation in asthma

Which one chemical causes muscle contraction

A

Histamines, cytokines, prostaglandins

Leukotrienes

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13
Q

Which region of the brain controls breathing

A

The brain stem

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14
Q

How do we control our breathing

A

Neurones within the pons and medulla of the brain stem control breathing. They extend from the brain to the diaphragm and muscles of the diaphragm.

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15
Q

What happens if the brain stem is damaged

A

A ventilator is required for life support. In extreme cases, this damage can cause death

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16
Q

What are chemoreceptors

A

Are cells found throughout the body which sense levels of pH, CO2 and O2

17
Q

What are the two types of chemoreceptors (give examples)

A

Central chemoreceptors - found in the brain stem medulla. They sense pH H+ and PCO2 through the cerebrospinal fluid in the CNS. Most important ones

Peripheral chemoreceptors - found in carotid bodies of the common carotid arteries and the aortic bodies at the arch of the aorta. They sense pH H+ and PCO2 and PO2 in arterial blood

PCO2 (partial CO2 levels)

18
Q

How do chemoreceptors control breathing

A

They signal to neurones in the brainstem to adjust breathing via contraction of diaphragm/intercostal muscles. This helps regulate O2, CO2 and pH