6. General Aspects of Pressure Flashcards

1
Q

Define pressure.

A

Pressure is the force applied per unit area. Its SI unit is the pascal (N/m2).

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2
Q

What is force?

A

Force is a vector quantity

that can cause an object with

mass to accelerate.

Newton’s second law defined

force as the mass of an object
multiplied by its acceleration.

Its SI unit is the newton.

One newton will accelerate a
1 kg mass at
1 m/s2 in a vacuum.

Gravity gives any object

an acceleration of 9.81 m/s2

making one newton

equivalent to a 102 g weight.

This is a small pressure when applied
to a squared metre area,
so pressure is normally
expressed in kilopascals (kPa).

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3
Q

What other units of pressure are there?

A

1 bar is equivalent to:

> 1 atmosphere

> 14.5 lb/in2 (psi)

> 30 inches of Hg

> 101 kPa

> 760 mmHg (torr)

> 1020 cm H2O

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4
Q

Are you more likely to dislodge a blockage in a cannula when using a 2 or 20 mL syringe?

A

A 2 mL syringe,

as pressure is force over area.

The 2 mL syringe has a smaller

cross-sectional area so

the force applied by the thumb is spread

over a smaller area

generating a higher pressure.

For this reason care must be taken

when injecting fluids with a

small syringe as the high pressure

generated could cause tissue damage.

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5
Q

What is the difference between partial and total pressures?

A

Dalton’s law states that in a gas mixture

the pressure exerted by each

individual gas is equal to the pressure

that gas would exert

if it occupied the container alone.

This is the partial pressure

(the term ‘tension’

refers to the pressure

exerted by a gas

dissolved in liquid).

Total pressure is the sum of all

the partial pressures in the mixture.

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6
Q

Is atmospheric pressure constant?

A

No.

Atmospheric pressure is created

by the force of gravity

acting on the molecules that

make up the atmosphere

and therefore atmospheric pressure

will depend on the

height of the atmosphere

and

its density.

This means that atmospheric pressure

will fall with altitude

and rising temperature.

As a consequence,

the partial pressure of the gases
that make up the air will also fall,

leading to low partial pressures of oxygen at altitude.

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7
Q

What is gauge pressure?

A

Gauge pressure refers to

pressure measurements

above or below atmospheric pressure.

An empty cylinder pressure

will have a gauge pressure of zero.

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8
Q

What is absolute pressure?

A

Absolute pressure refers to

pressure measurements incorporating

atmospheric pressure –

it is gauge pressure plus atmospheric pressure.

An empty cylinder will have an absolute pressure of 1 bar.

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9
Q

Is blood pressure an absolute or gauge pressure?

A

Blood pressure is a gauge pressure.

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10
Q

How do manometers work

A

> A manometer consists of a

fluid-filled column,

which is open to the atmosphere

and therefore reads gauge pressure.

> Gravity acts on the fluid

to produce a pressure,

which is dependent on

the density
+
the height of the fluid

but independent

of the cross-sectional area of the column

(pressure = height × density × gravitational force).

> They are used to measure low pressures.

> Inaccuracies can be caused
by surface tension.

This leads to an over-reading
in water manometers

and

an under-reading
in mercury manometers

(in practice this has no clinical significance as a 6-mm-wide column of water will only over-read by 0.04 kPa).

> They can be made more sensitive by
using fluids with a low density

(e.g. a pressure of 1 kPa will
support a column of mercury 7.5 mm high
or a column of water 10.2 cm high).

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11
Q

What are barometers?

A

> Barometers are closed
to the atmosphere
and therefore measure absolute pressure.

> A mercury barometer has a

Torricellian vacuum above it,

which contains mercury vapour

at its saturated vapour pressure (SVP).

> Barometers like the

Fortin’s barometer
and Goethe’s device

can be used to measure

sub-atmospheric pressures.

Here, the height of the

measuring column falls

rather than rising

and this principle was
used to predict bad weather;

low atmospheric pressures would
cause a fall in the height of the
fluid in a ‘thunder tube’,
predicting an oncoming storm.

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12
Q

How do aneroid gauges work?

A

> Aneroid gauges

(from the Greek meaning ‘no water’)

such as the Bourdon gauge are used

to measure high pressures

where manometers would be impractical

(e.g. to measure the pressure of a
137 bar oxygen cylinder you would
need a mercury column 104 m high
or a water column 1394 m high!).

> A Bourdon gauge consists
of a coiled metal tube linked
to a cog and a pointer.

The cross-sectional area of the
tube is elliptical and

when exposed to increases
in pressure it changes to a
circular cross-sectional shape,

which causes the tube to uncoil,
moving the pointer across a scale.

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