chapter 4 Flashcards

1
Q

Describe pulmonary circulation

A

pulm art accompany airways as far as the terminal bronchioles - break up to supply capillary bed that lies in walls of alveoli
- oxygenated blood collected from capillary bed by small pulm veins (run between lobules) and form the 4 large veins

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2
Q

What is the mean pulm art pressure?

what is pressure difference from inlet to outlet of the pulm and systemic systems?

A

15 mmHg

pulm: 15-5 mmHg = 10 mmHg
systemic: 100-2 = 98 mmHg
Factor of 10 difference!

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3
Q

Describe the difference between alveolar vs extra alveolar vessels

A
  1. Alveolar vessels exposed to alveolar pressure (include capillaries and slightly larger vessels in corners of alveolar walls)
    - caliber determined by relationship between alveolar pressure and pressure within them
    - exposed to alveolar pressure and compressed if this increases
  2. Extra-alveolar vessels: arteries and veins that run through the lung parechyma
    - exposed to pressure less than alveolar and pulled open by the radial traction of surrounding parenchyma
  3. large vessels near hilum are outside lung substance and exposed to intrapleural pressure
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4
Q

What is equation for vascular resistance?

A

vasc resistance = (input pressure - output pressure)/blood flow

PVR = (15-5)/6L = 1.7 mmHg*min/litre

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5
Q

What happens to PVR when pulmonary arterial pressure increases? when pulmonary venous pressure increases?

A

PVR DECREASES

The decrease is because of recruitment and distension

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6
Q

What is the predominant mechanism for fall in PVR at high vascular pressures?

A

distension

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7
Q

What is critical opening pressure (for pulm vessels)?

A

Applies to EXTRA-ALVEOLAR vessels

When the lung is completely collapsed and the pulmonary artery pressure has to be raised several centimeters of water above downstream pressure before any flow at all occurs. This is because the smooth muscle tone of the vessels is so effective.

In contrast, when lung volume is high the PVR is low

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8
Q

Drugs that cause contraction of the muscle and increase PVR:

Drugs that can relax smooth muscle in the pulmonary circulation:

A

serotonin histamine and norepinephrine

acetycholine and isoproterenol

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9
Q

What is Fick principle?

A

. .
VO2 = Q(CaO2 - CVO2)

The volume of blood passing through the lungs each minute

VO2 = oxygen consumption 
CaO2 = O2 concentration in blood leaving
CVO2 = O2 concentration in blood entering lungs
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10
Q

What is the difference in pressure between the top and bottom of lung in the pulmonary arterial system?

A

30 cmH2O or 23 mmHg in lung that is 30 cm high

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11
Q

Explain the 4 zones of the lung

A
  1. Zone 1:
    - PA > Pa > Pv
    - alveolar pressure above pulmonary arterial pressure - capillaries are squashed flat
    - does not occur under normal conditions
    - ventilated but unperfused lung is dead space
  2. Zone 2:
    - Pa > PA > Pv
    - blood flow determined by difference between arterial and alveolar pressures
    - Starling resistor (sluice or waterfall effect)
    - increasing recruitment of capillaries occurs down this zone
  3. Zone 3:
    - Pa > Pv > PA
    - flow is determined by the arterial-venous pressure difference
    - increase in blood flow in this region is chiefly from distension
  4. Zone 4:
    - at low lung volumes when extra-alveolar vessels are narrowed

Also note: blood flow decreases along the acinus

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12
Q

Which O2 determines hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction?

A

Alveolar not arterial blood!

Marked vasoconstriction when the alveolar PO2 is reduced below 70 mmHg

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13
Q

What causes vasoconstriction of the pulmonary circulation

A
  • hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction (from PAO2 - alveolar)
  • low blood pH causes vasoconstriction
  • ANS increases sympathetic outflow which causes vasoconstriction
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14
Q

What is Starlings law (water balance in lung)

A

net fluid out = K[(PC-Pi) - omega (piC-pii)]

K = filtration coefficient
Pc = capillary hydrostatic pressure
Pi = interstitium hydrostatic pressure
piC = capillary osmotic pressure
pii= interstitial osmotic pressure
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15
Q

List functions of pulmonary cicrulation

A
  1. gas exchange
  2. reservoir for blood
  3. filter blood
  4. biological activation of ACEI to ACEII
  5. Inactivates vasoactive substances: bradykinin
    - Removes seronin, prostaglandin E2 and F2a, norepinephrine, leukotriene
  6. Metabolizes vasoactive and bronchoactive substances: arachidonic acid
    - makes luekotrienes (lipoxygenase pathway)
    - makes thromboxane A2 and prostaglandins (cyclooxygenase pathway)
  7. clotting mechanism - mast cells containing heparin
  8. secretes special immunoglobulins (IgA)
  9. synthesis of phospholipids (like dipalmitoyl phosphatidylcholine - component of surfactant)
  10. protein synthesis for structural framework
  11. carbohydrate metabolism
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16
Q

What is transmural pressure?

A

Pressure difference between inside and outside of the capillaries

17
Q

What are the three main mechanisms that affect PVR?

A
  1. Lung volumes
    - u shaped
    - lowest PVR at FRC
  2. Pressures
    - increase art and ven pulm pressures causes decreased PVR
  3. Alveolar hypoxia which causes constriction of small pulmonary arteries
18
Q

What drugs cause increased PVR?

A

drugs that cause contraction of muscle: serotonin, histamine, norepinephrine

19
Q

What drugs cause decreased PVR?

A

drugs that relax smooth ,uscle
acetylcholine
isoproterernol

20
Q

How is NO formed and what is the mechanism of action?

A

NO formed from L-arginine via endothelial NO synthase.
NO activates soluble guanylate cyclase and increases synthesis of cyclic GMP (guanosine 3’5’-cyclic monophosphate) which leads to smooth muscle relaxation

21
Q

what are 2 potent vasoconstrictors that endothelial cells release?

A

Thromboxane

Endothelin-1

22
Q

What is the normal lymph flow in humans?

A

20 ml/hr

23
Q

What lung volume is PVR lowest at?

A

FRC