pk3 Surfactant and Resistance Flashcards

1
Q

What generates the distending pressure of the lung?

A

The distending pressure of the lung is generated by the elastic recoil of the lungs and thoracic cage.

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2
Q

What determines the volume for any given distending pressure?

A

Compliance determines the volume for any given distending pressure.

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3
Q

What determines the compliance of the thoracic cage?

List 3 conditions in which the compliance of the thoracic cage is decreased.

A
  • The compliance of the thoracic cage depends on its rigidity and shape.

1 - Arthritic spondylitis.

2 - Kyphoscoliosis.

3 - Spasticity of thoracic or abdominal musculature.

*There are no conditions which cause an increase in compliance of the thoracic cage.

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4
Q

What determines the compliance of the lung?

Which of these properties has the most significant effect on elastic recoil?

A

1 - Elastic properties of lung tissues (e.g. collagen, elastin etc.).

2 - Surface tension due to the air-liquid interface. Surface tension acts to collapse the lung and so decreases compliance.

  • E.g. a fluid-filled lung is much more compliant than an air-filled lung because the air-liquid interface is removed, so surface tension decreases.
  • 2/3 of the total elastic recoil of the lungs is caused by surface tension.
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5
Q

What is surface tension?

How does it act to collapse the lung?

A
  • Surface tension is the force generated by the air-interstitial fluid interface that results from the tendency of water to shrink to the minimum possible surface area.
  • This is due to the attractive intermolecular forces between water molecules, pulling them together.
  • In a spherical alveolus, the surface tension generated by the air-liquid interface has a tangential component that pulls the alveolus inwards, collapsing it.
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6
Q

Describe the shape of a normal lung compliance curve.

A
  • X axis: distending pressure.
  • Y axis: volume.
  • The graph is a straight line until high distending pressures, where the curve plateaus as it approaches total lung capacity (compliance begins to decrease).
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7
Q

What is Laplace’s Law?

What is the implication of Laplace’s law?

A
  • For spherical vessels:

P = 2T / r

P = Pressure.

T = Tension.

r = Radius.

  • The implication of Laplace’s law is that smaller alveoli must have a greater internal pressure to keep them inflated (because the change in surface tension is negligible). *But in reality, it is more complicated, as explained in a later card.
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8
Q

What is alveolar interdependence?

What is the advantage of alveolar interdependence?

A
  • Alveoli are said to be interdependent because each alveolus is mechanically coupled to other adjacent alveoli (as they share a common wall).
  • This is advantageous because this allows alveoli to prevent the collapse of adjacent alveoli.
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9
Q

What is surfactant?

Why is surfactant needed in the lungs?

A
  • Surfactant is a detergent-like substance that acts to greatly lower the surface tension in alveoli.
  • Surfactant is needed in the lungs because if the lungs where solely lined with interstitial fluid, the surface tension would be so great that breathing would be impossible.
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10
Q

What is the surface tension of pure interstitial fluid?

How does this change with surfactant?

A
  • Pure interstitial fluid has a surface tension of 70mN/m.

- With lung surfactant, surface tension of interstitial fluid drops to 2mN/m.

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11
Q

Which component of surfactant is responsible for its surface tension-lowering effect?

A

DPPC is responsible for the surface tension-lowering effect of surfactant.

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12
Q

Which cells secrete surfactant?

A

Surfactant is secreted by type 2 alveolar epithelial cells.

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13
Q

Describe the structure of surfactant.

How does its structure relate to its function?

A
  • Surfactant has a glycerol backbone.
  • It has one hydrophobic tail containing a palmitate molecule.
  • It also has one hydrophilic tail containing a phosphate molecule and a choline molecule.
  • In the air-interstitial fluid interface, the palmitate tail moves to the air and the phosphate-choline tail moves to the interstitial fluid.
  • This causes surfactant molecules to line the air-liquid interface, displacing interstitial fluid from the interface.
  • This reduces the collapsing radial forces generated by the interstitial fluid.
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14
Q

How does surface area affect the surface tension-lowering effect of surfactant?

Why does this happen?

A
  • High surface area increases the surface tension-lowering effect of surfactant.
  • This is because a higher surface area will allow for a higher density of surfactant in the alveoli.
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15
Q

How does the internal pressure of small alveoli compare to that of large alveoli?

A
  • According to Laplace’s law, P = 2T / r, smaller alveoli should have a higher internal pressure.
  • However, a smaller radius means that surfactant density increases.
  • This increases the surface tension-lowering effect of surfactant, balancing out Laplace’s law.
  • The net difference in pressure between small and large alveoli is therefore the same.
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16
Q

What is hysteresis?

What causes it?

A
  • Hysteresis is the phenomenon in which the pressure-volume curve of the lung is different on inhalation as compared to expiration.
  • It is caused by the changing density of surfactant as the radius of the alveoli increase during inspiration.
17
Q

Give an example of a disease in which lung compliance is increased, and a disease in which lung compliance is decreased.

A
  • Emphysema increases lung compliance (due to loss of elastic tissue).
  • Pulmonary fibrosis decreases lung compliance.
18
Q

What is infant respiratory distress syndrome?

What causes it?

How is it treated?

A
  • Whilst in the womb, a foetus has no air-liquid interface, and therefore there is no need for surfactant.
  • Surfactant only appears in late gestation.
  • In infant respiratory distress syndrome, infants are born with a lack of surfactant.
  • This can also be accompanied by fibrous hyaline membranes that form on the alveoli, hindering diffusion.
  • The infant must therefore expend a lot of energy to inflate the lungs, which also deflate to low volumes at expiration.
  • Infants become hypoxic, hypercapnic, acidotic and exhausted.
  • It has various aetiologies, including maternal diabetes and prematurity.
  • Assayed immature lungs can be treated with glucocorticoids, which accelerate maturation.
  • After birth, it can be treated by administering surfactant directly into the trachea.
19
Q

What causes adult respiratory distress syndrome?

A
  • Adult respiratory distress syndrome is caused by damage to the alveolar-capillary interface, and to type 2 alveolar epithelial cells.
  • This can be due to a large number of disorders, including pneumonia, sepsis and smoke inhalation.
20
Q

Define airflow resistance.

A

Airflow resistance is the pressure difference required to achieve a given flow.

21
Q

What is the normal airflow resistance in the lung?

A

Normal airflow resistance is 0.2kPaL/s.

22
Q

List the resistances that must be overcome in order to achieve airflow in the lungs.

A

1 - Work is required to stretch the lung against its compliance.

2 - Work is required to move air against resistance to flow by friction.

23
Q

List 2 equations for flow.

From this, derive the equation for resistance.

A

F = ΔP / R

or

F = ΔP π r^4 / 8 L η

therefore

1 / R = π r^4 / 8 L η

R = 8 L η / π r^4

F = Flow.

P = Pressure.

R = Resistance.

r = Radius.

L = Length of the airway.

η = Viscosity.

24
Q

How does airway resistance change throughout the lung?

Why?

A
  • Resistance is highest in the trachea and is lowest in the alveoli.
  • This is because resistance is proportional to 1/r^4, so as radius increases, resistance decreases exponentially.
  • Even though the radius of the trachea is greater than that of a single alveolus, the total cross sectional area is much greater in the alveoli compared to the trachea, therefore the resistance is lower in the small airways.
  • 80% of the total resistance is in the large airways.
25
Q

Describe the physiological control of bronchial diameter.

A
  • Bronchial diameter is under control of smooth muscle in the airways, which itself is under the control of the autonomic nervous system:
  • Bronchoconstriction is caused by:

1 - Increased vagal parasympathetic activity (also induces mucus secretion).

2 - Local hormonal mediators such as histamines and leukotrienes.

3 - Decreased airway CO2.

  • Bronchodilation is caused by:

1 - Activation of beta 2 adrenoceptors by adrenaline or sympathomimetic drugs.

2 - Non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic innervation.