Airway structure+function Flashcards

1
Q

What are bronchi split into following the trachea?

A

Secondary(Lobar) bronchus
Tertiary(Segmental) bronchus

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2
Q

What is a respiratory bronchiole?

A

A region of bronchioles containing alveoli

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3
Q

How do you describe the branching of the airways?

A

Dichotomous

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4
Q

What leads to an alveolar sac?

A

Alveolar duct

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5
Q

What are T1 and T2 alveolar cells and what are their functions?

A

T1: Thin, delicate barrier to facilitate gas exchange

T2: Replicate to replace T1 cells
-Secretes surfactant(reduces surface tension) and antiproteases
-Xenobiotic metabolism

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6
Q

What is the percentage cover of T1 and T2 alveolar cells?

A

T1~95%
T2~5%(But has greater number of cells)

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7
Q

By what 3 means are the functions of the airways facilitated

A

mechanical stability (cartilage)
control of calibre (smooth muscle)
protection and ‘cleansing’

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8
Q

What is the pharynx and what regions is it split into?

A

Def-A common passageway for food, liquids and air
Nasopharynx
Oropharynx
Laryngopharynx

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9
Q

Describe the general innervation of the nasal passage and the purpose of the nasal conchae

A

highly vascular – contribute to warming and ‘humidification’ of intra-nasally-inhaled air

Olfactory bulb branches down into nasal passage and detects smell

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10
Q
A

Ciliated cell

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11
Q
A

Blood vessel

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12
Q
A

Goblet cell, mucus

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13
Q
A

Smooth muscle

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14
Q

What are the 7 main types of cells in the airway and give an example of each?

A

Lining cells - Ciliated
Contractile cells - Smooth muscle
Neuroendocrine cells - Nerve cells
Secretory cells - Goblet cells
Connective tissue cells - Fibroblast
Vascular cells - Endothelial cells
Immune cells - Mast cells
SCLIVCN

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15
Q

What is the purpose of mucous and serous acini in a bronchial gland?

A

Mucous cells: Secrete mucus
Serous cells: Secrete anti-bacterial enzymes e.g lysozymes

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16
Q
A

Axoneme of the cilia
(Microtubules within it)

17
Q

Roughly how many cilia are there per ciliated cell?

A

~200

18
Q

What is the structure of the axonemes inside the cilia like?

A

‘9+2’ configuration

19
Q
A

Intracellular anchoring proteins

20
Q
A

Ciliary hooks-Engage with mucus

21
Q

What are the 4 main functions of the airway epithelium?

A

-Secretions of mucus
-Movement of mucus by cilia
-Physical barrier
-Production of inflammatory/regulatory mediators

22
Q

Give some examples of inflammatory/regulatory mediators produced in the airway epithelium

A

NO, CO, Arachidonic acid metabolites, Chemokines, Cytokines, Proteases

23
Q

What is thought to be the mechanism of NO?

A

Increase the rate of ciliary beating, can be stained to show presence

24
Q

What 3 major effects do airway smooth muscle cells have on the airway and what physiological process stimulates these pathways?

A

Structure
-Controls hypertrophy+proliferation
Tone
-Controls contraction, relaxation
Secretion
-Secretes cytokines, chemokines

Inflammation promotes these pathways, especially secretion

25
Q

What is the mechanism of inflammation on airway smooth muscle cells?

A

Inflammation acts through:
-Cytokines
-Bacterial products

1)Activates nitric oxide synthase to produce NO
2)Activates COX to produce prostaglandins
3)Produces cytokines, chemokines and adhesion molecules

26
Q

What is the blood flow to the airway mucosa(ml/min/100g tissue)?

A

100-150mL/min/100g of tissue

27
Q

How does blood return from the tracheal circulation?

A

Systemic veins

28
Q

How does blood return from bronchial circulation?

A

Bronchial and pulmonary veins

29
Q

Give 7 functions of the tracheo-bronchial circulation

A

Good gas exchange (directly between airway tissues and blood)
Contributes to warming of inspired air
Contributes to humidification of inspired air
Clears inflammatory mediators
Clears inhaled drugs (good/bad, depending on drug)
Supplies airway tissue and lumen with inflammatory cells
Supplies airway tissue and lumen with proteinaceous plasma (termed ‘plasma exudation’)

30
Q

What type of innervation supplies the airways and what molecules act as neurotransmitters in those pathways?

A

Parasympathetic - cholinergic
Sympathetic - adrenergic
Sensory

31
Q

What 4 factors control airway function?

A

Nerves
Inflammatory mediators
Proteases
Reactive gas species

32
Q

What is unique about the innervation of the airways in humans compared to most other mammals?

A

Human airways aren’t sympathetically innervated

33
Q

Through what 2 mechanisms are the human airways able to relax?

A

Adrenaline produced by the adrenal glands
NO produced by nitric oxide synthase in epithelium

34
Q

What nerve innervates the airways?

A

Vagus

35
Q

How are goblet cells stimulated to produce mucus?

A

Through vagus nerve innervation

36
Q

What are the regulatory-inflammatory cells in the airways?

A

Structural cells+
Neutrophils
Macrophages
Eosinophils
Mast cells
T-lymphocytes

37
Q

What are the ganglions present in the system innervating the airway?

A

Nodose ganglion
Dorsal root ganglion

38
Q

What are some diseases that lead to a loss of airway control?

A

Cystic fibrosis
COPD
Asthma
-All are common conditions