Topic 35 - Respiratory air fractions, and ventilation coefficient Flashcards
1
Q
Words to include
A
Ventilation, spirometry
- Ventilation
- Quantity of air entering and leaving the lung in unit time
- Functional fractions
- Inspired and expired quantitiy of air
- Degree of possible gas exchange
- Spirmoter
Respiratory air fractions
- Total Lung Capacity (TLC)
- Volume Tidal (VT)
- Functional Residual Capacity (FRC)
- Inspired Reserve Volume (IRV)
- Expiratory Reserve Volume (ERV)
- Residual Volume (RV)
- Volume Capacity (VC)
- VC = VT + IRV + ERV
- Forced Vital Capacity (FVC)
- VC related to unit time
Dead volume
- Ø contribute directly to gas exchange
- Anatomical dead space
- Air fraction of upper and lower respiratory tract
- Respiratory epithelium (ø)
- Physological dead space
- Respiration (ø)
- Epithelium
- Anatomical dead space + alveolar dead space
- FRC + VD
- “Used air” fraction
- VT - VD
- Gas excange
- “Fresh air” fraction
Ventilation coefficient
- Deepness of insipration
- Vcoeff
- Fresh air (VT - VD) / Used air (FRC + VD)
- Used air
- FRC + VD
- Air i dead space + proportion of air which earlier took part in gas exchange
- Fesh air
- VT - VD
- VT that takes part in gas exchange
2
Q
Topics to include in the essay
A
- Ventilation (definition)
- Spirometry
- Respiratory air fractions
- Dead volume
- Ventilation coefficient
3
Q
Define ventilation
A
- Ventilation: The quantitiy of air entering and leaving the lung in unit time
4
Q
Respiratory air fractions
How can air fractions be measured?
A
Air fractions can be measured by the spirometer
5
Q
Respiratory air fractions
Draw the graph, and name the fractions
A
- The inspired and expired quantitiy of air and volume of the air present in the lungs can be divided into functional fractions
- Tidal Volume (TV)
- Inspiration Reserve Volume (IRV)
- Expiratory Reserve Volume (ERV)
- Expiratory capacity (EC)
- Functional Residual Volume (FRV)
- Vital Capacity (VC)
- Residual Volume (RV)
- Inspiratory Capacity (IC)
- Minimal volume (MV)
- Total Lung Capacity (TLC)
6
Q
Respiratory air fractions
How to calculate vital capacity (VC)
A
VC = VT + IRV + ERV
Vital capacity is the maximal volume changes that can actively be attained
7
Q
Respiratory air fractions
Dead volume
A
- Anatomical and physiological dead space which does not contribute directly to the gas exchange
-
Anatomical dead space
- The air fraction of the upper and lower respiratory tracts
- Volume of the airways, which are not covered by respiratory epithelium
-
Physiological dead space
- The former area and the areas excluded from respiration, covered by epithelium
- Anatomical dead space + alveolar dead space
- Under normal conditions the alveolar dead space is low and thus the anatomic and physiological dead space are nearly equal
-
FRC + VD
- The sum of the amount of air in the dead space plus that proportion of air which earlier took part in the gas exchange = “used air” fraction
-
VT – VD
- Takes part in gas exchange (not in dead space) = “fresh air” fraction
8
Q
Ventilation coefficient
A
- The deepness of inspiration increases the proportion of fresh air to the used air already present, and thus improves gas exchange
- The deeper the inspiration the greater the VC therefore the more efficient is the respiration
-
Used air
- FRC + VD
- The sum of the amount of air:
- In the dead space
- That proportion of air wihic earlier took part in gas exchange
-
Fresh air
-
VT - VD
- The part of VT that takes part in gas exchange
-
VT - VD
- VD = Volume Dead
9
Q
Consequence of taking the first breath
A
- Small amount of air will remain in the pulmonary tissue even after removing the lung frim the body and compressing it
- This air-fraction appears in the tissue as minimal volume (MV), while taking the first breath
- That’s why the lung of the newborn (born live) is floating on the surface of the water, while in stillborn the lung will sink down