Topic 38 - The regulation of respiration Flashcards
1
Q
Words to include in nerval control
A
The respiratory center
- Medulla oblongata
- Pons
- Receptors
- Sense gas tension of blood
-
Pneumotaxic center
- Inhibits inspiration
-
Apneustic center
- Stimulates inspiration senter
-
Primary inspiration center (DRG)
- Inhibits center of expiration
- Generates continous spontaneous inspiration
-
Secondary expiration center (VRG)
- Inhibits inpiration center
-
Nucleus of n. phrenicus
- Gets stimulus from DGG
Severance experiment
- Cut above pons
- No effect
- Cut in middle of pons
- Deep inspiration
- Inspiration-inhibiting center in upper pons
- Pneumotaxic
- Cut on border of pons and medulla
- Deep and shallow breathing
- Apneustic center
- Cut on medulla above exit opint of n. phreinicus
- Respiratory cycle stops
- Autonomous respiratory group
- DRG (dorsal respiratory group)
- Inspiration
- VRG (ventral respiratory group)
- Expiration
- Cut below exit point of n. phrenicus
- No change in respiration
- Hering-Breuer reflex
- N. vagus cut
- Deep inspiration
- Sudden expiration
Afferent nervous factor
- Nervous afferentation
- Mechanoreceptors (most important)
- Hering-Breuer reflex
- Stretch receptors in lung
- Stimulate expiratory cells of VRG
- Inhibits inspiratory cell groups of DRG
- Via n. vagus
- Nucleus of n. phrenicus
- Stops expiration
- Stretch receptors in lung
- Afferent signals
- Emotion
- Hyperventilation caused by movement of limbs
- Pain
- Somtic
- Visceral
- Sleep
- Baroreceptor effect
Afferent nervous factors
- Forced expiration
- Inspiratory muscles are inhibited actively
- Expiratory muscles are stimulated
Chemical regulation
- Central regulation
-
Sensitive to:
- pCO2 in blood
- Cerebrospinal fluid
- pH
- Bottom of 4th ventricle
- Receptor location
- DRG activity stimulation
- CO2 drop
- pH drop
- Apneustic
- Sensitive to pCO2
-
Sensitive to:
- Peripheral reception
- Receptors
- Glomerus caroticum (carotid body)
- Glomerus aorticum (arotic body)
- Sensitive to pO2
- Central chemoreception is reduced
- Secondary protective mechanism (pO2)
- Hyperventilation
- Secondary protective mechanism (pO2)
- Receptors
2
Q
Words to include in type of breathing
A
-
Normal respiration
- Uniform deepness of inspiration and expiration
-
Dyspnea
- Random breathin
-
Apnea
- Absence of breathing
-
Biot’s rhythm
- Encephalitis
- Meningitis
- Breathing cycle is interrupted by apnea
-
Asphyxia
- Suffication
-
Cheynes-stokes’s breathing
- Long apnea
- Increasing inspiration expiration cycles
-
Kussmaul breathing
- Deeper and longer inspiration and expiration
- Uremia
- Diabetic coma
3
Q
Words to include in defensive respiratory reflexes
A
-
Sneezingin
- Irritation of upper respiratory tract
- Extensive inspiration followed by explosion-like expiration
-
Coughing
- Tracheo-bronchial irritation
- Chemoreceptors
- Smaller and larger bronchial segements
-
Nociceptive apnea
- Prevents inhalation of harmful gases
- Apnea
-
Diving reflex
- Defensive apnea
-
Combined swallowing reflex
- Food touches pharyngeal wall → reflex-pause in breathing
- Prevents choking
4
Q
Topics to include in the essay
A
- Nerval control
- The respiratory center
- Severance experiment
- Afferent nervous factors
- Efferent nervous factors
- Chemical regulation
- Types of breathing
- Defensive respiratory reflexes
5
Q
Nerval control
The respiratory center
A
-
Nuclear arrys responsible for the different aspects of respiration are located in medulla oblongata and the pons
- These arease can act like receptors: they can sense the gas tension of blood
-
Pneumotaxic center
- Inhibits inspiration
-
Apneustic center
- Stimulates the inspiration center
-
Primary inspiration center (DRG)
- Inhibits the center of expiration and generates continuous spontaneous inspiration
-
Secondary expiration center (VRG)
- Inhibits the center of inspiration
-
Nucleus of phrenic nerve
- Gets stimulus from the DRG
6
Q
Nerval control
How to study the division of respiration-control in the brain
A
Severance experiment
- With or without intact n. vagus
-
Cut above the pons
- No effect
- CNS above pons has no direct effect on respiration, plus n. vagus stimulates the expiration
-
Cut in the middle of pos
- Deep inspirations
- There is an inspiration-inhibiting center (called pneumotaxic) in the upper Pons
-
Cut on the border of pons and medulla
- Deeper and shallower breathing
- Above the cut there is an apneustic center responsible for normal rhythm of respiration
-
Cut on the medulla above the exit point of n. phrenicus
- The respiratory cycle stops
- Autonomous respiratory group
- DRG (dorsal respiratory group): responsible for inspiration
- VRG (ventral respiratory group): responsible for expiration
-
Cut below the exit point of n. phrenicus
- No change in respiration
- Cutting n. vagus:
- Hering-Breuer reflex: Deep inspiration and then sudden expiration
7
Q
Nerval control
Afferent nervous factor
A
- Inspiration and expiration stimulates mechanoreceptors (most important nervous afferentation)
-
Hering-Breurer refle:
-
The stretch receptors in the lung:
- Stimulate the expiratory cells of the VRG via n. vagus
- Inhibit the inspiratory cell group (DRG) via n. vagus
- Result: Nucleusofn. phrenicus stops expiration
-
The stretch receptors in the lung:
- Other reflexes:
- CNS, emotion changes
- Limb - muscle work - hyperventilation
- Somatic pain sensing reflexes
- Visceral pain sensing reflexes
- Sleep effects
- Baroreceptor effects
8
Q
Nerval control
Efferent nervous factors
A
- During forced expiration:
- Inspriatory muscles are inhibited actively
- Expiratory musclesarestimulated
Normally expiration is a passive process
9
Q
Nerval control
Chemical regulation
A
-
Central regulation
- Sensitive to pCO2 in:
- Blood
- Cerebrospinal fluid
- pH
- Receptors are located at the bottom of 4th ventricle
- Too much CO2: pH drop, stimulating DRG activity indirectly
- Apneustic area is specifically sensitive to pCO2
- Sensitive to pCO2 in:
-
Peripheral regulation
-
Receptors in:
- Glomus caroticum (carotid body)
- Glomus aorticum (aortic body)
- Mostly sensitive to pO2
- Important when central chemoreception is reduced → secondary protective mechanism activated (pO2 reception) → hyperventilation
-
Receptors in:
10
Q
Give the differen types of breathing
A
-
Normal respiration
- Steady alternation of inspiration and expiration of uniform deepness
- Anything deviating from that is abnormal
-
Dyspnea
- Random breathing
-
Apnea
- Absence of breathing
-
Biot’s rhythm
- Observes primarily in the case of encephalitis or meningitis
- Breathing cycles are interrupted by a longer apnea
-
Asphyxia
- Too long pause leads to suffocation
-
Cheynes-Stokes’s breathing
- Long apnea which ends with increasing inspiration expiration cycles
-
Kussmaul’s breathing
- Deeper and longer inspiration and expiration
- Observed in:
- Uremia
- Diabetic coma
11
Q
Give the defensive respiratory reflexes
A
-
Sneezing
- Due to mechanical or chemical irritation of upper respiratory tract
- Mechanism: extensive inspiration followed by an explosion-like expiration
- Clears the upper respiratory tract
-
Coughing
- Due to tracheo-bronchial irritation
- Chemoreceptors are in the bronchial segments
- Mechanism: similar to sneezing (though less intensive)
-
Nociceptice apnea
- Preventing the body from inhaling harmful gases or fumes
- Mechanism: sudden break in breathing (apnea)
-
Diving reflex
- Irritating the skin of the head with water (diving) results in defensive apnea
- Breathing motions are generally inhibited under the water
- Protection against inspiration of water into the lungs
- Humans and young animals
-
Combined swallowing reflex
- When the food touches the pharyngeal wall, reflex-pause in breathing happens
- Prevents choking