Review posters 11/05/2016 Flashcards

1
Q

Pulmonary ventilation

A

Volume of air breathed in and out per minute

= TV x RR

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2
Q

Anatomical dead space

A

Not all the air inhaled reaches the alveoli for gas exchange. This air is unusable and is therefore known as anatomical dead space.

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3
Q

Alveolar ventilation

A

Volume of air exchanged between the alveoli and the atmosphere per minute
= (TV-anatomical dead space) x RR

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4
Q

Describe the ventilation and perfusion of the lung

A

Lung is less ventilated and perfused at the top.

Better ventilated and perfused at the bottom.

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5
Q

Alveolar dead space.

A

When an alveolus is well ventilated but not well perfused.

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6
Q

How would you go about increasing pulmonary ventilation?

A

Increasing TV or RR. Increasing depth of breathing (TV) is the most advantageous due to anatomical dead space.

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7
Q

What four factors influence the rate of gas exchange in the alveoli?

A

The thickness of the alveoli
The surface area of the alveoli
The diffusion co-efficient of oxygen and carbon dioxide
Partial pressure gradient

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8
Q

What is the diffusion co-efficient ?

A

The ability of a gas to dissolve in the membrane. Carbon dioxide has a much higher one that oxygen (20x)

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9
Q

Daltons law

A

The total pressure exerted by a gas is the sum of the partial pressures of each individual gas.

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10
Q

What is partial pressure of a gas?

A

The pressure that one gas in a mixture of gases would exert if it were the only gas present occupying the same volume

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11
Q

The equation to work out the partial pressure of oxygen in the alveoli is:

A

PaO2= PiO2- [PaCO2/0.8]

PaO2= the alveoli partial pressure of oxygen
PiO2= the partial pressure of inspired oxygen
PaCO2= the partial pressure of CO2 in the arteries
0.8= the respiratory exchange ratio
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12
Q

Ficks law

A

The amount of gas that moves across a sheet is proportional to the area but inversely proportional to its thickness.

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13
Q

What is the purpose of the membrane?

A

To form a boundary
Selectively permeable
Maintains difference in ion concentration
Controls entry of nutrients and exit of waste

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14
Q

Name the sorts of proteins you would find in the lipid bilayer?

A
Integral proteins (span the bilayer). These could be ion channels or carrier proteins
Peripheral proteins (sit on the outside of the membrane)
Glycoproteins- sugar attached to proteins on the outside of the membrane
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15
Q

Docking mannose receptors

A

Allow exocytosis

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16
Q

Describe the lipid bilayer

A

Fluid membrane made up of phospholipid molecules.
Each phospholipid molecule has a hydrophillic head and hydrophobic tail.
Cholesterol is present in the membrane and offers stability and fluidity.

17
Q

What types of junctions can you get between cells?

A

Desmosomes
Gap junctions
Tight junctions

18
Q

Describe the types of junctions you can get between cells

A

Desmosomes- adhering junctions. Anchor cells together in tissues prone to stretch e.g. skin, cardiac
Tight junctions- lateral borders of epithelial cells joined together.
Gap junctions- communicating junctions that allow movement of charged ions

19
Q

Purpose of membrane carbohydrates

A

Self identity markers- different cells have different markers.

20
Q

What are the factors important for a particle to be able to diffuse across a membrane

A
Lipid solubility
Size of the particle
Magnitude of the concentration gradient
Surface area
Diffusion distance
21
Q

Diffusion

A

Movement of particles from a high concentration to a low concentration (passive process)

22
Q

Osmosis

A

Net diffusion of water from a high concentration to a low concentration (passive process)

23
Q

Name the two active processes that can transport particles across a membrane

A

Active transport

Facilitated diffusion

24
Q

Facilitated diffusion

A

Movement of particles via a carrier/channel protein down their concentration gradient.

25
Q

Active transport

A

Two types- secondary active transport and primary active transport

26
Q

Primary active transport

A

Movement of the particle against its concentration gradient using energy derived from ATP

27
Q

Secondary active transport

A

Ions are used to provide energy to drive a particle against its concentration gradient

28
Q

The two types of secondary active transport

A

Antiport- ion moves in different direction to particle

Symport-ion moves in the same direction to particle

29
Q

Importance of the sodium pottasium pump

A

Maintains intracellular concentrations of Na+ and K+
Regulates cell volume by controlling concentration
Provides energy for secondary active transport

30
Q

Osmolarity

A

The amount of osmotically active substances present in a solution

31
Q

Tonicity

A

The effect osmolarity has on cell volume

32
Q

Three key things for carrier mediated transport

A

Specificity
Competition
Saturation