Respiratory physiology 7 Flashcards

1
Q

The central chemoreceptor:
a. is located on the dorsal surface of the medulla
b. responds to PaCO2 and PaO2
c. is stimulated by pH changes in the cerebrospinal fluid
d. is acutely affected by bicarbonate in the serum

A

c. is stimulated by pH changes in the CSF

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2
Q

The central chemoreceptors respond indirectly to

A

PaCO2

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3
Q

Which of the following freely diffuse across the BBB?
CO2
H+
HCO3-

A

CO2

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4
Q

After CO2 enters the CSF, it dissociates into

A

H+ & bicarb

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5
Q

As H+ in the CSF rises, the rate and depth of respiration ______________

A

increase until a new minute ventilation steady state is achieved

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6
Q

__________________ do not pass through the BBB

A

Non-volatile acids (such as lactic acid)

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7
Q

Therapeutic hyperventilation (to reduce ICP) is only effective for

A

a few hours to ~ 2 days

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8
Q

The central chemoreceptor is stimulated by

A

hypercarbia & hypoxemia
but it’s depressed by profound hypercarbia & hypoxemia

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9
Q

The most important stimulus for the central chemoreceptor is

A

the hydrogen ion concentration in the CSF

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10
Q

_____________ drives the respiratory pacemaker in the dorsal respiratory center

A

H+

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11
Q

Select the statements that BEST describe the carotid chemoreceptors (Select 2.):
a. They are more sensitive to SaO2 than PaO2
b. Hering’s nerve is part of the afferent limb
c. They are more sensitive after carotid endarterectomy
d. Type 1 Glomus cells mediate hypoxic ventilatory drive

A

b. Hering’s nerve is part of the afferent limb
d. type 1 glomus cells mediate hypoxic ventilatory drive

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12
Q

The peripheral chemoreceptors reside in

A

the carotid bodies at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery
also present in the transverse aortic arch

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13
Q

The chief responsibility of the carotid body is to monitor

A

hypoxemia (PaO2 <60 mmHg)

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14
Q

The carotid body does not respond to

A

SaO2 or CaO2

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15
Q

Sub anesthetic doses of inhalation and intravenous anesthetics (0.1 MAC) depress

A

the hypoxic ventilatory drive (risk of hypoxemia in the PACU)

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16
Q

Carotid endarterectomy severs the

A

afferent limb of the hypoxic ventilatory response- which is why we don’t do bilateral CEA

17
Q

Secondary responsibilities of the peripheral chemoreceptors include

A

monitoring PaCO2, H+, and perfusion pressure

18
Q

What is the response to hypoxemia?

A
  1. PaO2 <60 mmHg closes the oxygen-sensitive K+ channels in Type 1 glomus cells
  2. Raises RMP, opens, Ca2+ channels, increases neurotransmitter release
  3. Action potential is propagated along Hering’s nerve–> glossopharyngeal nerve (CN9)
  4. Afferent pathway terminates in the inspiratory center in the medulla
  5. minute ventilation increases to restore PaO2
19
Q

Conditions that impair hypoxic ventilatory response include

A

CEA
sub-anesthetic doses of inhalation and IV anesthetics

20
Q

What conditions do not impair the hypoxic ventilatory response?

A

even though CaO2 is reduced with anemia as well as carbon monoxide poisoning, the PaO2 is usually normal which explains why they do not stimulate the hypoxic ventilatory response

21
Q

Which reflex prevents alveolar overdistension?
a. Hering-Breuer deflation reflex
b. paradoxical reflex of Head
c. Hering-Breuer inflation reflex
d. Pulmonary chemoreflex

A

c. Hering-Breuer inflation reflex

22
Q

_____________ in the smooth airway muscle in the lung influence respiratory pattern

A

Stretch receptors

23
Q

What is the role of the Hering-Breuer inflation reflex?

A

helps to avoid over-inflation
when lung hyperinflation turns off the respiratory drive

24
Q

What is the role of the Hering-Breuer deflation reflex?

A

activates the respiratory drive when lung volume is too small (helps to prevent atelectasis)

25
Q

What is the role of the J receptors (pulmonary C-fiber receptors)

A

increases the respiratory rate in the setting of pulmonary embolism or CHF

26
Q

What is the role of the paradoxical reflex of head?

A

causes a newborn baby to take their first breath

27
Q

Where do stretch receptors in the airway transmit their information?

A

along the vagus nerves (CN10) to the dorsal respiratory center (respiratory pacemaker)

28
Q

Is the Hering-Breuer inflation reflex active during normal inspiration?

A

No- it is active when lung inflation is >1.5 L above FRC (x3 normal Vt)

29
Q

Which agent is MOST likely to increase intrapulmonary shunt?
a. etomidate
b. ketamine
c. desflurane
d. propofol

A

c. Desflurane

30
Q

Hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction is a

A

local reaction that occurs in response to a reduction in alveolar oxygen tension (not arterial PO2)

31
Q

The goal of HPV is to

A

improve matching of ventilation & perfusion (to minimize shunt)

32
Q

The pulmonary vascular bed is the only region in the body that responds to hypoxia

A

with vasoconstriction

33
Q

HPV is inhibited by

A

volatile anesthetics >1.5 MAC
phosphodiesterase inhibitors
dobutamine
some calcium channel blockers
hypervolemia
excessive PEEP
large tidal volumes

34
Q

HPV is not inhibited by

A

IV anesthetics including ketamine, propofol, and opioids

35
Q

HPV is a protective mechanism that minimizes shunt flow during

A

atelectasis or one-lung ventilation