PULMONARY 05: DIFFUSION/PERFUSION Flashcards

1
Q

The process of diffusion follows basic gas laws. What does this mean facilitates transfer of gases across membranes in the diffusion process in this case?

A
  1. ) Large surface area of alveoli
  2. ) Short distance to travel (0.2-0.5um)
  3. ) Gases have advantageous diffusion properties (this seems like a copout but whatever)

Slide 5 in lecture

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2
Q

How does the structure of RBC’s and capillaries help facilitate gas exchange? (2 reasons i’m thinking of, 1 structural and 1 temporal)

A

Only one RBC can fit through a capillary at a time, so all around the RBC gas exchange can occur.

Capillaries are short, but the RBC passage time (<1s) is long enough to facilitate exchange of gasses.
Slide 6 in lecture

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3
Q

How many barriers does gas have to cross to get between the alveoli and capillaries?

A

12

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4
Q

Order of barriers gasses must go through to get FROM alveoli TO lung capillaries

A
  1. ) Across alveolar air space
  2. ) Across alveolar water space
  3. ) From alveolar water interface into Type I epithelial cell
  4. ) Across this cell
  5. ) From type I epithelial cell into interstitial space (with ECM matrix)
  6. ) Across this matrix
  7. ) From ECM matrix into capillary endothelial cell
  8. ) Across this cell
  9. ) Across PM of endothelial cell into blood plasma
  10. ) Across blood plasma
  11. ) Out of blood plasma and across RBC PM
  12. ) Through PM of RBC to bind to Hgb

Slide 7

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5
Q

Fick’s law dictates that the flow of gas is proportional to what?

A

Area, the gas’s diffusion constant, and the driving pressure force (deltaP)

Slide 9

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6
Q

Fick’s law dictates that the flow of gas is inversely proportional to what?

A

The thickness of the barrier

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7
Q

How does Fick’s law dictate the flow of gas will be affected by pulmonary edema?

A

In pulmonary edema there is a much bigger barrier; thus gas flow will be impeded and diffusion decreased.

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8
Q

How does Fick’s law dictate the diffusion of a gas will be affected by a collapsed lung?

A

If you collapse a lung, the area of the system is immensely reduced, thus diffusion is immensely reduced or even eliminated

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9
Q

How does Fick’s law dictate that being at high altitude will affect diffusion?

A

At high altitude, you’re starting at a lower pressure of gas X, which means there is a reduced driving force. Therefore, you decrease diffusion.

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10
Q

What does graham’s law say is proportional to the rate of diffusion?

A

The solubility coefficient of the gas

slide 10

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11
Q

what does graham’s law dictate is inversely proportional to the rate of diffusion

A

The square root of the molecular weight of the gas

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12
Q

Which is better at diffusing, CO2 or O2?

A

CO2. But O2 will diffuse readily under normal conditions

Slide 10

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13
Q

Why do we assume that PACo2 and PaCO2 are the same?

A

Because CO2 is so good at diffusing

Slide 10

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14
Q

What does it mean if something is diffusion limited?

A

The amount of molecule X brought into circulation is limited by diffusion across the alveolar membrane
Slide 14

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15
Q

What are two reasons diffusion limitation might result in a low diffusion rate?

A
  1. ) Molecule X cannot diffuse across the barrier
  2. ) Molecule X is converted into something else as soon as it is brought into the blood , therefore it no longer counts toward the partial pressure (it is no longer dissolved as its own thing) - This gets back to Henry’s law where the partial pressure of a gas above and its concentration in solution are proportional

Slide 14, slide 15 for henry’s law

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16
Q

What is perfusion limited gas transfer?

A

The amount of molecule X carried into circulation is limited by the rate of perfusion (aka, the rate of blood going through pulmonary capillaries)
Slide 17

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17
Q

Insoluble gasses like N2O are __(diffusion/perfusion)__ limited; soluble gasses like carbon monoxide are normally speaking __(diffusion/perfusion)__ limited

A

Perfusion limited

Diffusion limited

slide 19

18
Q

Under normal conditions, ppO2 in alveoli does what? How does this interact with normal perfusion an result in a normal kind of gas exchange?

A

It climbs quickly. This means there is a strong driving force which quickly equilibrates. This means that of the ~1s there is a rbc in a capillary, 1/2 of it is extra time , aka “Diffusion reserve time”

Slide 20

19
Q

How does exercise alter the perfusion of alveoli?

A

RBC’s are moving much faster through the system, so transit time is decreased. There is still plenty of time , in a normal individual, to transmit oxygen, but if someone is sick and already experiencing other pulmonary/circulatory issues this could potentially be a noticable change.

20
Q

How does edema alter oxygen uptake along the pulmonary capillary

A

In mild edema, the slope of the curve will change due to thickening of the barrier for O2 to travel (slows rate of diffusion). During exercise now, patient does not have a goo reserve time so you see this limitation in oxygen diffusion. This becoms more pronounced as the edema becomes more severe.
Slide 20

21
Q

In normal conditions, oxygen is __(diffusion/perfusion)__ limited. In many pathologies such as edema, and often combining with exercise, oxygen is now __(diffusion/perfusion)__ limited.

A

Perfusion;
diffusion
Slide 20

22
Q

How do we measure the diffusion properties of someone’s lungs?

A

CO.

Because CO is not supposed to be in the lungs, we assume there is nothing in arterial system. this is a huge driving force.

Therefore, the single breath dilute CO test (combined with helium as a tracer to nromalize volume) can be sued to see how much is getting into blood.

Breathe in CO, hold 10s, then breathe back out. During that time, the CO will cross the barrier (helium will not) to get into bloo. THen breathe out and see how much CO and He come out. If smeone has a diffusion limited pathology, the amount that crosses is reduced leaving more in the lungs.

Slides 22, 23

23
Q

O2 and CO2 are normally (diffusion/perfusion) limited

A

Perfusion (slide 25)

24
Q

Under what conditions will O2 become diffusion limited?

A

Under extreme conditions (altitude, extreme exercise), or disease (fibrosis, edema)

slide 25

25
Q

How much blood is carried in the pulmonary arteries at any point in time

A

500mL (total CO)

slide 28

26
Q

How much blood is in alveolar capillary network?

A

~70mL but you can increase that 2x or 3x in exercise

27
Q

The pulmonary capillaries have more/less resistance compared to systemic capillaries

A

Typically less

slide 29

28
Q

The pulmonary system has what kind of driving pressure compared to the systemic system (circulatory)?

A

Reduced driving pressure gradient (slide 29)

29
Q

Factors that influence lung perfusion (4)

A

Pulmonary vascular resistance
Gravity
Alveolar pressure
Arterial-venous pressure gradient

Slide 30

30
Q

How does pulmonary vascular resistance impact lung perfusion?

A

Alters the deltaP (driving force of flow).

Pulmonary vessels are shorter and wider than systemic, have less smooth muscle, and lower resting tone.

Slide 31

31
Q

PVR __(increases/decreases)__ with __(Increasing/decreasing)__ vascular pressures

A

Increases;
Decreases

Or vice vesa
Decreases
increasing

Slide 32

32
Q

As we see an increase in pressure, there is a drop in resistance. Why?

A
  1. Recruitment and distention (vessels that are normally closed are recruited and opened due to the increasing pressure)
  2. ) Recruitment via vessels open but having no flow/negligible low flow in system have increased flow due to increased pressure gradient

3.) Vessels that are already opened are distended further open.
slide 32

33
Q

kinds of pressures around pulmonary blood vessels

A

Extra alveolar pressures experience lot of tissue pressure

Alveolar pressures experience pressure from expanding aveoli
slide 33

34
Q

What changes PVR during normal breathing?

A

Lung volume

Slide 34

35
Q

What is the effect of gravity on distribution of blood flow?

A

Gravity means more blood go to bottom easier and that blood flow depends on posture
slide 36

36
Q

How can you measure the effect of blood flow in someone’s pulmonary system?

A

Radiation into lungs and you measure with scintillation counters on the back to see where radioactivity is
slide 36

37
Q

Ventilation is highest in the (apex, base) of lungs

A

Base
slide 37
also see slide on pulm4 about this

38
Q

Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction shifts blood in what way?

A

From poorly ventilated areas to well ventilated areas

39
Q

During what moment in someone’s life is hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction critical to have normal breathing?

A

Right after birth

40
Q

Fluid movement across capillary is governed by a balance of what forces?

A

hydrostatic, oncotic

41
Q

If drainage of capillaries exceeds maximal lymph flow, what resuls?

A

Edema

42
Q

What kind of heart failure results in pulmonary edema?

A

LV HF