Lung Volumes & Capacities Flashcards

1
Q

Tidal Volume (VT)

A

is the amount of air inspired / expired in a single breath.
•Varies under circumstances -for instance, increases
during aerobic exercise
•Normal resting = 500 ml

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2
Q

Residual Volume (RV)

A

volume of air that cannot be forced out, no matter how hard one tries.
•Getting the ‘wind knocked out of you’ – you were
forced into RV
•Cannot be determined by spirometry

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3
Q

Inspiratory Reserve Volume (IRV)

A

additional volume that can be inhaled greater than tidal volume.
•The gap between inspiration during tidal volume and
maximal inspiration.

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4
Q

Expiratory Reserve Volume (ERV)

A

additional volume that can be exhaled greater than tidal volume.
•This does not include residual volume.
•Requires activation of expiratory muscles (i.e., active
respiration).

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5
Q

Total Lung Capacity (TLC)

A

maximal volume to which lungs can be expanded with greatest effort

TLC = IC + FRC
= VC + RV
= ERV + RV + IRV + VT

Cannot be measured by spirometry

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6
Q

Functional residual capacity (FRC)

A

amount of air that remains in the lungs following a normal expiration.

FRC = ERV + RV

Cannot be determined by spirometry
Helps prevent collapse of lungs, reduces workload, dilutes toxic inhaled gases

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7
Q

Vital capacity (VC)

A

amount of air that can be maximally inspired following a maximal expiration.

VC = IRV + VT + ERV

VC influenced by posture, ability of diaphragm to contract/relax, strength of respiratory muscles, thoracic wall expansibility, resistance to air flow, lung elasticity, disease

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8
Q

Inspiratory capacity (IC)

A

capacity of air that can be maximally inspired following a normal exhale

IC = VT + IRV

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9
Q

As One Ages:
•TLC?
•RV?
•VC?

  • Extra detail:
  • ERV?
  • RV?
  • So FRC?
  • IC?
A

As One Ages:
•TLC stays similar
•RV increases
•VC goes down

  • Extra detail:
  • ERV decreases
  • But RV increases to a greater extent
  • So FRC increases
  • IC decreases
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10
Q

Seated vs. Supine body position:
•TLC seated vs supine
•RV seated vs supine
•VC seated vs supine

Extra detail:
•FRC seated vs supine
•ERV seated vs supine
•IC seated vs supine (slightly)

A

Seated vs. Supine body position:
•TLC seated > supine
•RV seated = supine
•VC seated > supine

Extra detail:
•FRC seated > supine
•ERV seated > supine
•IC seated < supine (slightly)

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11
Q

Obesity:
•TLC and VC?
•RV?
•Seated vs. supine become very ______to one another

Extra detail:
•ERV?
•IC?
•FRC?

A

Obesity:
•Reduces TLC and VC
•RV stays similar
•Seated vs. supine become very similar to one another

Extra detail:
•ERV largely reduces
•IC less largely impacted
•FRC is lower

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12
Q

Define Emphysema

A

“obstructive lung disease (OLD)”
•Characterized by limitations of airflow due to partial or complete obstruction, hard to “push” air out often
•TLC and RV increases
•VC decreases

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13
Q

Define Fibrosis

A

“restrictive lung disease (RLD)”
•Characterized by reduced expansion of lungs, hard to inflate or fill the lungs
•RV, TC, VC decreased

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14
Q

What is a Helium (He) dilution & describe how it works:

A

Inhalation of a known concentration (C1) of helium [insoluble in blood] from a known volume (V1)

Change in concentration (C2) allows for determination of V2 = FRC

  • RV = FRC – ERV
  • TLC = FRC + IC
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15
Q

What is Body plethysmography:

A

Enclosed rigid box -> Breath against shutter
•Pressure in lungs change
•Pressure in box changes proportionally in opposite direction

-Boyle’s Law (P1V1 = P2V2)

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16
Q

Explain the Nitrogen-Washout Technique for determining residual volume:

A

Determines dead space.

Individual breaths 100% O2 through one-way valve, all expired gas is collected, monitored until N2 reaches zero.
Total volume of all gas expired is determined, and multiplied by % of N2 in mixed expired air (80%).

17
Q

Pulmonary Dead Space Basic model =

A

VT = VA + VD

  • VA = volume that participates in gas exchange (alveolar)
  • VD = volume that does not participate in gas exchange (conducting airways)
  • Traditionally: VD/VT = (FACO2- FECO2)/FACO2
  • Underestimates VD in diseased individuals
18
Q

Define Physiological dead space:

A

VD/VT = (PaCO2 - PECO2)/PaCO2

  • Physiological dead space is Anatomical Dead Space + Alveolar Dead Space
  • Sensitive to pathophysiological conditions
  • Anatomical dead space = 1 mL per lb BW (150 lbs = 150 mL)