Week 11: Special Respiratory Conditions: Pregnancy, Lung Development and Birth Flashcards
What are the 2 key hormones that increase during pregnancy?
Estrogen and progesterone
What is the action of estrogen during pregnancy (both good and bad)
increases fluid retention
Good: as it will increase blood volume which will increase delivery of O2 to both baby and mum to ensure that both their metabolic demands are met.
Bad: This fluid retention is bad however as it causes oedema through the airway mucosa and stimulates mucus gland hyperplasia
Comment on the physiological changes that happen to the mother
e.g. Metabolic O2 requirement, physically, and values such as RV, ERV etc.
- The metabolic oxygen requirement increases by about 15 – 30 % above normal (for twins this will be increased)
- Physically we are going to have compression of the thoracic cavity (due to the growing baby)
- The diaphragm is going to move up, restricting the ability to inflate the lung
- Decreased RV
- Decreased ERV
- Decreased IRV
- Decreased FRC
Why when compression of the thoracic cavity, and the diaphragm moving up, will cause decreased RV, FRC, ERV and IRV BUT FEV1 and VC will still not decrease?
- Despite these changes, VC and FEV1 will remain unchanged as the hormonal changes make the ligaments more flexible, widening the subcostal angles, creating a wider and deeper chest cavity (tidal volume gets bigger taking up more of the reserve volumes)
- Despite this, the energetic cost will go up as the lung as made more stiff
What are the stages of foetal lung development and their time periods
Briefly describe what happens in the canalicular and saccular period
Canacular all about development of blood vessels
Sacular is when the aveoli sacs develop (first sites of gas exchange develop)
When is surfactant produced during lung development of the baby?
inbetween canalicular and saccular period and onwards
During lung development, the foetal lungs are filled with fluid rather than air. What is the role of the fluid?
- This fluid plays an important role in providing a slight positive pressure to the lungs, resulting in lung expansion responsible for stimulating cell division and lung growth.
- This lung fluid also helps flush out the debris from the lungs (that accumulates from the rapid cell division and cell apoptosis)
Why does the foetus have respiratory movements at the end of the 1st trimester even know it is not actually moving air through its lungs?
- These movements begin to develop the respiratory muscles through moving fluid in and out of the lung and are essential in ‘priming’ or preparing the muscles so that once the baby is born, they are capable of breathing oxygen
Why are the foetal respiratory breathing movements inhibited in the last 7 days?
- It is further important to note that these breathing movements are inhibited in the last 7 days in an effort to prevent the lungs filling with fluid, as well as meconium (foetus poo)
- If this meconium is inhaled, it can lead to a particularly nasty form of pneumonia that is hard to treat
Also if the lungs are filled with fluid it will make it very hard for the baby to take its first breath.
What is the difference between foetal Hb and adult Hb
- Foetal haemoglobin actually has a higher O2 affinity (left shifted) meaning that it is able to strip oxygens off maternal haemoglobin at the gas exchange site in the placenta
When is foetal Hb replaced with adult Hb?
around 6 months of age
What is the first breath of a baby triggered by?
thoracic compression via vaginal compression (elastic recoil) rebound of the ribcage then triggers the first breath
- Most newborns take their first breath within __ seconds, and develop a normal respiratory rhythm within ___ seconds
20 seconds, 90 seconds
What are the 2 mechanisms which faciliate clearance of the lung fluid from a foetus?
- The thoracic compression with vaginal delivery will clear some of this fluid
- The epithelial cells (that produced fluid during embryonic development) also switch to absorption of fluid to assist in the process
Why is it important for the first few expirations of the baby to not be complete? (I.e. why are crying screaming babies a positive sign)
- Crying, screaming babies have a forced expiration
- This collapses a number of airways causing gas trapping
- This then facilitates the inflation of the lung
We must not expel all the air, or the alveoli would simply collapse (we want to inflate the air)
- Over a period of weeks, there will be progressive inflation of the lungs, resulting in higher lung volume, and a significantly diminished required pressure for ventilation
Explain the mechanism of why the alveoli want to collapse?
What is the substance that prevents this from occuring?
- surface tension is generated by the attraction of H2O molecules to each other that lie within the alveolar fluid
- Specifically, it is the hydrogen molecules that are attracted to each other, this is known as hydrogen bonding or van der Waals forces
- The net force of all of these hydrogen bonds creates a force that draws into the centre of the alveoli (in the diagram below, the centre of the bubble) –> makes the alveoli collapse
- Thus, in order to keep these alveoli, open we use pulmonary surfactant (which basically, gets in the way of the hydrogen bonds, disrupting them and thus reduces the forces drawing the alveoli inwards)
What is pulmonary surfactant mainly made up of and what is the most important one?
lipids (90%), proteins and carbohydrates
Most lipids are phospholipids with the most important being DPPC
What are the 5 functions of surfactant?
- Important in reducing the work of the inflating lung (through reducing surface tension)
- Decreases the lungs tendency to collapse (lung collapse is known as atelectasis)
- It may play a role in lung defence (particularly surfactant proteins)
- It may play a role in phagocytosis of bacteria and virus (surfactant protein component)
- It may also assist the mucociliary escalator (protein component)
What are the 4 defects of preterm lungs?