Physics Relevant to Respiratory Physiology Flashcards

1
Q

What is Boyle’s Law?

A

Pressure exerted by a gas is inversely proportional to its volume. Gases (singly or in mixtures) move from areas of high pressure to low pressure.

For any given constant temperature the pressure of any gas can be predicted from its mass and the volume of the chamber it occupies

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2
Q

Using Boyle’s law, explain how air moves into the lungs during inspiration

A

The diaphragm contracts and descends, and the external intercostal and scalenes contract, increasing the volume of the thoracic cavity by pulling the ribs upwards and outwards.

This increases the volume of the lungs (which are stuck to thoracic wall), thus decreasing the pressure within the lungs to 1 mmHg below atmospheric pressure. This creates a pressure gradient with the external environment, causing a movement of air into the lungs.

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3
Q

Using Boyle’s law, explain why air moves out of the lung during expiration

A

Somatic motor neurons stop stimulating muscles, allowing the diaphragm, external intercostal and scalenes to relax. Elastic recoil of the lungs and the thoracic cavity causes the everything to return to its relaxed position.

This means that alveolar pressure increases to about 1 mmHg above atmospheric pressure, creating a pressure gradient. This causes the movement of air down the pressure gradient and out of the lungs.

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4
Q

What is the law of LaPlace?

A

The pressure (P) exerted on the centre of a bubble encapsulated by a fluid film is a function of surface tension of the fluid (T) and the radius of the bubble (r)

P=2T/r

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5
Q

What is Dalton’s law?

A

States that the total pressure of a gas mixture is the sum of the pressures of the individual gases. This can be applied to the partial pressures of important gases in air such as

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6
Q

What is Charles Law?

A

States that the volume occupied by a fixed mass of gas at a constant pressure is is directly related to the absolute temperature (V/T=k)

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7
Q

What is Henry’s Law?

A

States that the amount of gas dissolved in a liquid is determined by the pressure of the gas and it’s solubility in the liquid. Can be applied to gases dissolved in plasma.

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8
Q

What is the definition of the partial pressure of a gas?

A

The pressure of a gas in a mixture of gases is equivalent to the percentage of that particular gas in the entire mixture multiplied by the pressure of the whole gaseous mixture . Each gas contributes to the total pressure of the mixture.

The partial pressure is the pressure the gas would have if the gas were in the same volume and temperature by itself.

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9
Q

What is Gay-Lussac’s Law?

A

The pressure of a fixed mass of gas at constant volume is directly proportional to its absolute temperature (P/T = k).

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10
Q

What is Avogadro’s law?

A

The volume occupied by an ideal gas is proportional to the number of moles of gas.

Equal volumes of gases at the same temperature and pressure contain the same number of molecules (6.023 × 1023, Avogadro’s number).

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11
Q

What is the universal (ideal) gas law?

A

The state of a fixed mass of gas is determined by its pressure, volume and temperature(PV = nRT)

Where

  • P is the pressure of the gas
  • V is the volume of the gas
  • n is the number of moles of the gas
  • R is the Universal Gas Constant (8.314)
  • T is the absolute temperature of the gas in Kelvin.
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12
Q

What is Graham’s Law?

A

The rate of diffusion or effusion of a gas is inversely proportional to the square root of the mass of its particles

In most circumstances, the mass of the particles and the density of the gas are sufficiently correlated to one another that an approximation can be made:

Rate of diffusion = 1/squarerootdensity

Thus, if a gas had particularly large particles, or is particularly dense, it will mix more slowly with other gases, and ooze more slowly out of containers.

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13
Q

What is Dalton’s law?

A

The total pressure of a mixture of gases is equal to the sum of the partial pressure of all of the constituent gases

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14
Q

What is the definition of partial pressure?

A
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15
Q

How is the solubility of a gas influenced by temperature?

A

For any given partial pressure of a gas, the solubilithy will be inversely proportional to temperature - in other words, increasing temperature results in decreased solubility

Due to dissociation of a gas in water is exothermic reaction - heat energy is released as gas molecules occupy potential spaces between molecules of solvent. This is more relevant to polar solvents such as water, which can form hydrogen bonds with dissolved gases. This process is different in organic solvents which don’t form hydrogen bonds.

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16
Q

What is the definition of dissolved gas tension?

A

Gas tension of a solution is the partial pressure of a gas with which that solution is in equilibrium

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17
Q

Why are dissolved gases not described in terms of partial pressure, but gas tension?

A

A dissolved gas does not exert pressure in the same way a gaseous mixture does, and cannot be described in terms of manometry. However, using Henry’s law, the dissolved fraction exists in equilibrium with the gaseous fraction, and therefore for every tension, there is a corresponding partial pressure. By convention gas tension of a solution as the partial pressure of a gas with which that solution is in equilibrium.

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18
Q

What is the main influencer of gas difssuion between body fluid compartments?

A

Partial pressure gradient, which is in turn affected by the solubility of a gas in each compartment

Concentration gradient is largely irrelevant

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19
Q

How is the amount of given gas in a solution influenced by solubility?

A
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20
Q

If one compartment contains a solvent where a gas is highly soluble, and an adjacent compartment contains a solvent where a gas is poorly dissolved, how will the gas distribute between the 2 compartments?

A

Gas will diffuse out of poor solvents compartment into good solvents compartment, until the partial pressure is the same in both liquids. The concentration of gas in the good solvent will, however, be much higher. This is a case of diffusion occurring against a concentration gradient.

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21
Q

What is vapour pressure?

A

This is the pressure exerted by a vapour above the surface of a liquid

22
Q

What is the saturation vapour pressure?

A

This is the pressure exerted by a vapour in equilibrium with liquid of the same substance. It is influenced by temperature and pressure

23
Q

What is the boiling point temperature?

A

The temperature at which vapour pressure equals atmospheric pressure. A lower atmospheric pressure will result in a lower boiling point

24
Q

What is the critical temperature of a gas?

A

The temperature above which it is not possible to liquefy a given gas by increasing its pressure - A substance is a gas when it is above its criticial temperature, and a vapour when it remains in gaseous phase below its critical temperature

25
Q

What is the critical pressure of a gas?

A

The minimum pressure which would suffice to liquefy a substance at its critical temperature

26
Q

What is the critical point of a gas?

A

The point of minimum pressure and maximum temperature at which both a gaseous and a liquid phase of a given compound can co-exist

27
Q

What is the specific critical volume of a gas?

A

THe volume of space occupied by 1 kg of a gas at its critical point

28
Q

What is the latent heat of vapourisation?

A

The heat required to convert a substance from liquid to vapour at a given temperature. Latent heat of vapourisation decreases as ambient temperature increases, and is reduced to zero at the critical temperature of that substance

29
Q

What is absolute humidity?

A

The mass of water vapour present in a given volume of air

30
Q

What is relative humiditiy?

A

Percentage ratio of the mass of water vapour in a given volume of air to the mass required to saturate that given volume of air at the same temperature

31
Q

What are the colligative properties of all fluid?

A
  • Vapour pressure
  • Boiling point
  • Freezing point
  • Osmotic pressure
32
Q

How is boiling point affected by molar concentration of solutes?

A

Boiling point increases in proportion to the molar concentration of solutes

33
Q

How is freezing point affected by molar concentration of solutes?

A

Freezing point decreases in proportion to the molar concentration of solutes

34
Q

What is vapour pressure dependent on?

A

DEpendent on the vapour pressure of each chemical and the mole fraction of that component in the solution

35
Q

What is the definition of vapour pressure?

A

Pressure exerted by a pure substance at a given temperature in a system containing only vapour and condensed phase (liquid or solid) of a substance

36
Q

Why can the vapour pressure of a substance be used to describe how volatile a substance is?

A

Following initial boiling of liquid gas, vapour will fill the unoccupied volume of the chamber. The entire volume of the liquid gas will not be expected to turn into vapour - the rate of vapourisation will slow down. As this happens, part of vapourised gas will start to condesate. The rates of these two processes will work towards a point of equilibrium. When this equilibrium point is reached, this is known aws saturation vapoour pressure

A gas which has a very high vapour pressure is more volatile, i.e. its tendency to be a gas exceeds its tendency to be a liquid. The saturation vapour pressure of a volatile anaesthetic agent at room temperature may be quite high.

37
Q

How does temperature affect saturation vapour pressure?

A

As temperature increases, so does vapour pressure - increasing the energy of the molecules of the liquid by heating them allows more of those molecules to lift off from the surface of the liquid.

38
Q

How does atmospheric pressure influence vapour pressure?

A

The higher the ambient pressure, the higher the temperature at which saturation vapour pressure will exceed the ambient pressure

39
Q

What is the difference between a gas and a vapour?

A

Vapour is used to describe an evaporated substance whish is beow its critical temperature (i.e. still has the option of becoming a liquid if pressure increases). A gass is specifically used to describe a substance which is above its critical temperature (i.e. no matter what pressure does it will never liquify)

40
Q

What is the latent heat of vapourisation?

A

Defined as the heat required to convert 1 kg of a substance from one phase to another at a given temperature (SI unit of specific latent heat Jkg-1)

I.e. energy needs to be invested in the liquid (as heat) which translates into more rapid molecular movement which is required for evaporation to occur

41
Q

How much energy is required to convert 1 kg water into 1 kg steam at body temperature?

A

2.42 MJ - the lower the starting temperature, the more energy/latent heat is required. As temperature increases, less latent heat of vapourisation is required

42
Q

What is humidity?

A

Term used to refer to the water content of a gas volume

43
Q

What is the definition of absolute humidity?

A

The mass of water vapour present in a given volume of air

44
Q

What is relative humidity?

A

The ratio of the mass of water vapour in a given volume of air to the mass required to saturate that given volume of air at the same temperature. It is usually expressed as a percentage.

45
Q

How does heat and humidity of air change as it enters the respiratory system?

A

On the way towards the alveolus, gas becomes heated by airway structures to a point where it becomes the same temperature as the rest of the body, and at the same time the relative humidity increases to 100%. This occurs anatomically somehwere just past the carina (5cm distal to it, or in 2nd-4th generation bronchi according to the variable position given by different textbooks).

46
Q

How do the airways reclaim heat and moisture as air passes out of the lungs?

A

This exchange occurs because the air, coming in through the airways, cools their mucosal surface; on the way out the air is warmer than the surrounding mucosa, and donates some of its heat back to the walls of the airways.

So, assuming we start from 47 g/m3 at 37° C, if expired gas ends up at 100% relative humidity its water content will be 34 g/m3, with the remaining 13g/m3 precipitating as a sort of dew on to the respiratory mucosa. Some heat and moisture are reclaimed thereby.

47
Q

How does ambient air temperature influence the reclamation of moisture by the respiratory tract?

A

The hot air on the way into the lungs would therefore have warmed the respiratory mucosa, preventing the normal expiratory condensation of dew from taking place.

48
Q

How does the isothermic boundary in the lungs change change with increased ventilation?

A

Moves further into the lungs with increased minute ventilation - According to the 8th edition of Nunn’s, at minute volumes of over 50L/min the isothermic boundary has moved out of first-generation bronchi and into airways of 1 mm diameter.

49
Q

How does heart rate influence respiratory water loss?

A

Increasing the delivery of water to the gas exchange surfaces, and a tachycardic person with a heart rate of 140bmp may actually lose up to 60-70ml/hr

This has obvious implications for situations where a person may be compelled to exercise for prolonged periods (eg. some sort of sadistic charity fun run). Run a six hour marathon and you may have lost up to half a liter of water purely by breathing.

50
Q

How does intubation affect air humidification processes in the airways?

A
  • Increased heat loss by respiration
  • Increased water loss by humidification
  • Impaired humidification, if no special effort is made to heat and humidify the inspired gas mixture
51
Q

How does a gas humidity <40% affect ciliary function and mucus flow?

A

Causes ciliary paralysis and reduced rates of mucus flow. This can lead to decreased overall bronchial immunity