Pulmonary Physiology (Wondisford) - 11/29/16 Flashcards
Lung volumes (LITER)
Lung volumes (LITER)
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IRV
- Air that can still be breathed in after normal inspiration
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TV
- Air that moves into lung with each quiet inspiration (typically 500 mL)
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ERV
- Air that can still be breathed out after normal expiration
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RV
- Air in lung after maximal expiration; cannot be measured on spirometry
What is a capacity?
Types of capacity (4)
Sum of 2 or more physiologic volumes
- Inspiratory Capacity (IRV + TV)
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Functional Residual Capacity (RV + ERV)
- Volume of gas in lungs after normal expiration; includes RV, cannot be measured on spirometry
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Vital Capacity (TV + IRV + ERV)
- Maximum volume of gas that can be expired after maximal inspiration
- Usually called FVC (b/c you are forcing the change)
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Total Lung Capacity (IRV + TV + ERV + RV)
- Volume of gas present in lungs after a maximal inspiration
- Includes RV, cannot be measured by spirometry
Physiologic dead space
VD = VT x [(PaCO2 - PeCO2)/PaCO2]
“Taco, Paco, Peco, Paco”
(PaCO2 = arterial PCO2, PeCO2 = expired air PCO2)
VD = physiologic dead space = anatomic dead space of conducting airways + alveolar dead space
- Largest contributor of alveolar dead space = apex of healthy lung
- Volume of inspired air that does NOT take part in gas exchange
Physiologic dead space vs. Pathologic dead space
Physiologic dead space
- Approx. equivalent to anatomic dead space in normal lungs
Pathologic dead space
- When part of respiratory zone becomes unable to perform gas exchange
- Ventilated but not perfused
Ventilation
Minute ventilation (VE) vs. Alveolar ventilation (VA)
Minute ventilation (VE)
- Total volume of gas entering lungs per minute
- VE = VT * RR
Alveolar ventilation (VA)
- Volume of gas per unit time that reaches alveoli
- VA = (VT - VD) * RR
Normal values:
- RR = 12-20 breaths/min
- VT = 500 mL/breath
- VD = 150 mL/breath
FEV1 and FEF25-75
FEV<strong>1</strong> = volume of air forcibly expelled in 1 sec
FEF<strong>25-75</strong> = mean flow rate (volume/time) over middle half of expiration
- 25 designates that 25% of volume is gone from the lungs
- Slope can be used to calculate how fast air is being expired
FEV1, which is the amount of air forcibly exhaled in first second, = good measure of airflow
When expressed as a % of the forced VC (FVC), can be used to diagnose obstructive diseases (i.e. COPD, asthma)
Normal FEV1 greater than or equal to 80.
Restrictive lung disease patients demonstrate normal or increased FEV1%.
FEF25-75% = another way to estimate flow rate and correlates with FEV1% and flow volume loop