Ch 37 Pulmonary Ventilation Flashcards
What are the muscles of inspiration?
- External intercostals
- Sternocleidomastoid (lift up sternum)
- Anterior serrati (lifts ribs)
- Scaleni (lift first two ribs)
(5) Diaphragm
What are the muscles of expiration?
- Abdominal recti
- Internal intercostals
What is transpulmonary pressure?
The difference between alveolar pressure and the pleural pressure.
*A measure of elastic forces in the lungs that pull toward lung collapse (Recoil pressure)
What is lung compliance? What components comprise it?
The extent to which the lungs will expand for each unit increase in transpulmonary pressure.
Comprised by:
1. Elastic forces of the lung tissue (makes up 1/3 of total elasticity)
2. Elastic forces from surface tension of the fluid lining the inside walls of the alveoli (makes up 2/3 of lung elasticity)
What tissue types determine lung compliance?
Elastin and collagen.
Briefly, how does surfactant reduce surface tension on the alveolar surface?
Because the phospholipids do not dissolve uniformly in the fluid lining the alveolar surface.
Bonus: also made of surfactant apoproteins and calcium in addition to these phospholipids
What are the three types of ‘work’ that are required, together, for inspiration to occur?
- Compliance/elastic work: must overcome lung/chest elastic forces
- Tissue resistance work: required to overcome viscosity of lung and chest structures
- Airway resistance work: required to overcome airway resistance
Define the following: Tidal volume, inspiratory reserve volume, expiratory reserve volume, residual volume
Tidal: vol insp/expired with each breath
IRV: EXTRA volume you can inspire when inspiring with full force
ERV: Max EXTRA vol of air you can expire when expiring with full force
Residual: vol of air remaining in the lungs after the most forceful contraction
What is minute respiratory volume?
The total amount of NEW air moved into the respiratory passages each minute.
MRV = Tidal volume x respiratory rate
What is dead space air? What is anatomic vs physiologic dead space?
Air not useful for gas exchange because it’s never at the alveoli.
Physio DS: Air within nonfunctional alveoli
Anatomic DS: Air within all respiratory spaces BESIDES alveoli
How is alveolar ventilation measured? (aka what components comprise it?)
Resp rate x amount of new air entering alveoli with each breath (which is tidal volume minus physiologic dead space volume)
What keeps bronchioles from collapsing?
They lack cartilage, so they’re kept open by transpulmonary pressures.
Why and in what ways do the smaller bronchioles play a significant role in determining airflow in disease conditions?
-smaller size
-easily occluded by:
1. smooth muscle contractions in their walls
2. edema in their walls
3. mucus collecting in their lumens
How does the autonomic nervous system influence bronchiolar tree diameter?
Sympathetic:
poorly innervated, but they have beta-2 adrenergic receptors, which are VERY sensitive to epinephrine and to a lesser extent, norEpi . DILATED by epi/norEpi
Parasympathetic: A few PSNS nerves from the vagus innervate lung. Acetylcholine secreted causes mild-moderate bronchiolar constriction. This is why giving atropine, which blocks ACh, can relax resp passages.
-PSNS reflexes are also activated by irritations and infection
How do histamine and slow reactive substance of anaphylaxis influence bronchiolar diameter?
Both are released by mast cells during allergic reactions and cause bronchiolar constriction