Respiratory Diseases Flashcards
Diseases of the lung can be
- Infectious
- Non-infectious
Non-neoplastic
Neoplastic
Anatomy of the lung
2 lungs: left and right
Each lung has multiple lobes
Right - 3 lobes
Left - 2 lobes
A lot of holes - spongey cross-section
Function of the lung
Oxygenation of blood
Removal of waste products (CO2)
Requires ventilation and perfusion
Ventilation: movement of air
Perfusion: movement of blood
Air pathway and anatomy
Trachea -> Bronchi -> Bronchioles
Series of branching tubes; respiratory tree with 23 generations
Bronchioles and trachea composition
No smooth muscle or cartilage in bronchi and trachea
Thin strands of smooth muscle with epithelial lining; 1 mm in diameter
Structure of the lung
Airways, acini and secondary lobules, vasculature, lymphatics, pleura.
Airways: Trachea -> bronchi -> bronchioles (including terminal bronchioles and respiratory bronchioles)
Acini: Basic units of gas exchange supplied by a single terminal bronchiole (“Terminal respiratory unit”).
Acini include: Respiratory bronchioles, distal alveolar ducts, alveolar sacs (interstitial septum/alveolar wall lines all)
Alveolar sacs are lined by type 1 and type 2 pneumocytes.
Type 2 cells are the progenitor cells for type 1 cells and produce surfactant.
Alveolar wall
Alveolar wall: Gas transfer takes place across the alveolar-capillary membrane. The alveolar-capillary membrane consists of:
a) Capillary endothelium
b) Basement membrane and surrounding interstitial tissue
c) Alveolar epithelium (type 1 and 2 pneumocytes).
Gas bypasses all of these membrane components
Lines the terminal respiratory unit
Gas exchange
Requires
Ventilation: Gas movement from nose and mouth through large airways (trachea, bronchi, bronchioles) to lung parenchyma (alveoli), where gas exchange occurs
Perfusion:
Two systems of vessels:
Pulmonary: Deoxygenated blood is carried by the pulmonary artery from the right side of the heart to the lungs
The intimate contact between air in the alveoli and blood in the pulmonary capillaries allows gas exchange to occur
Oxygenated blood returns through the pulmonary vein to the left atrium
Bronchial: Oxygenated blood from the descending aorta and intercoastal arteries supplies lung parenchyma
Interference of either of these processes results in respiratory failure
Respiratory failure
Inability to maintain normal oxygen saturation of blood and to remove CO2 from blood entering the lungs.
Could be due to:
Decreased ventilation
Decreased perfusion
Ventilation/perfusion imbalance
How are injuries to the lung mediated?
Air - lungs are exposed to 10k L of air/day
Common mechanism of injury
**Most injuries occur due to something which is inhaled
Inhaled injurious agents can be
1. Infectious
Virus
Bacteria
Fungi
2. Non-infectious
Toxic gases
Cigarette smoke/particles
Inorganic particles
Organic particles
Blood
Bloodborne injurious agents can be:
1. Infectious
2. Non-infectious
Drugs - amiodarone (for heart arrhythmia), bleomycin (for cancer)
Autoimmune diseases (antibodies attack lungs)
Mechanism of defence for inhaled injurious
Nasal clearance - cough or sneeze
Tracheobronchial clearance by muco-ciliary “blanket” (ciliated epithelium)
Mucus is very sticky
Injurious agents are stuck here
Cilia sweep toward trachea
Clears smaller particles to be coughed up/swallowed
Alveolar clearance by macrophage system/immune system
Pulmonary infections
More frequent than infections of other organs
Account for the largest number of workdays lost
Most are upper respiratory tract infections caused by viruses
Pneumonia
Inflammation of the lung secondary to infection
Caused by bacteria, viruses, fungi, protozoa, rickettsia, and others
Most commonly caused by aspiration of organisms that colonize the oropharynx and less commonly by inhalation of infected aerosols, hematogenous dissemination and direct inoculation
Organisms enter the lung by
Aspiration:
Oral cavity infectious organisms (or in the stomach) gets misplaced
Gains access to lung
Inhalation:
Organism is in the environment
We breathe it in (COVID)
Blood:
Organism gains access to the blood - carried to the lung, where it establishes a secondary infection
Direct inoculation:
Trauma, stabbings, lung is penetrated by an object that is contaminated by bacteria/fungi
Once an organism enters the lung, neutrophils will proliferate in the acinus
Factors which determine if infection will occur depend on
- Dose and virulence of the organisms
A lot of organism/high virulence results in infection - Host susceptibility - pneumonia will occur if:
i) Defense mechanisms are impaired
ii) Impaired resistance (immunocompromised)