lecture 25 Flashcards

1
Q

what does surfactant do?

A
  • decreases surface tension inside the alveoli and inward pressure
  • preventing alveoli from collapsing
  • making alveoli easier to expand
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2
Q

surfactant

A
  • is secreted by type 2 alveolar cells and lines the inside of the alveoli
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3
Q

how does surfactant act as an equalizer

A

smaller alveoli have greater surface tension which means the greater it wants to collapse on it self, but surfactant make small and big alveoli equal so they can be equal

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4
Q

Why do small alveoli tend to collapse on itself

A
  • at an air filled-fluid interface we have surface tension due to the nature of water being polar and is adhesive and cohesive that causes an inwardly directed pressure that promotes collapsibility
  • so we’ll pump in a little more surfactant to account for the extra surface tension and since surfactant is lipidy and watery the lipids will break up cohesion between water molecules and less cohesion of water molecules means decrease in surface tension
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5
Q

Law of laplace

A

P (collapsibility) = 2T (surface tension)/r

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6
Q

alveolar pressure at rest is

A

0mm Hg meaning it’s equal to atmospheric pressure

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7
Q

intrapleural pressure

A

is -4mm Hg it is sub atmospheric

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8
Q

transpulmonary pressure

A
  • is the force inflating the lungs
    alveolar pressure - intrapleural pressure = 4 mm Hg
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9
Q

why is intrapleural pressure sub-atmospheric?

A
  • because the 2 membranes are stuck together so where one goes the other goes, but they are drawn in different directions
  • the elastic recoils of lungs is inwards and elastic recoil of chest is outwards
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10
Q

Lung compliance and elastance

A
  1. Compliance: ability for lungs to stretch
    Loss of compliance: fibrosis (exposure to asbestos)
  2. elastance: ability for lung to snap back after being stretched
    loss of elastance: emphysema (smoking a lot)
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11
Q

the volume that moves into and out of lungs

A

tidal volume (500ml)

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12
Q

Boyles Law

A

P1V1=P2V2
- if volume increase pressure decreases

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13
Q

Tidal volume

A
  • volume of air into and out of lungs
  • 500mL
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14
Q

inspiratory reserve volume

A

everything you can breath in

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15
Q

expiratory reserve volume

A

everything you can breath out

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16
Q

residual volume

A
  • everything that’s left inside that can’t be pushed out
17
Q

inspiratory capacity

A

= tidal volume + inspiratory reserve volume

18
Q

vital capacity

A

= TD + IRV + ERV

19
Q

total lung capacity

A

= TD + IRV + ERV + RV

20
Q

functional residual capacity

A

= ERV + RV

21
Q

total pulmonary ventilation

A

air in and air out of respiratory system per minute
= ventilation rate (breath/min) x tidal volume
= 12 breaths/min x 500mL = 6L/min

22
Q

what is anatomical dead space and what is it’s value

A
  • it is everywhere gas exchange is not occurring like conducting airways
  • 150 mL
23
Q

alveolar ventilation

A
  • how much air is in alveoli available for gas exchange
    alveolar ventilation = ventilation rate x (tidal volume-anatomical dead space)= 4.2L/min
    Better indicator of ventilation efficiency