Respiratory Physiology - Mechanics of Breathing Flashcards

1
Q

Muscles of inspiration

A

Diaphragm
External intercostal muscles

Accessory muscles under exertion also used

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2
Q

Form of respiration in health

A

Negative pressure ventilation

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3
Q

How is negative intrathoracic pressure generated

A

Diaphragm contracts + flattens and intercostal muscles contract to lift rib cage

Increases lung volume and therefore decreases intrathoracic pressure

Generates pressure gradient from atmosphere in to the lungs

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4
Q

Innervation of diaphragm

A

2 phrenic nerves
C3/4/5

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5
Q

Method of expiration in normal circumstances

A

Passive expiration

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6
Q

Method of expiration in exertion

A

Element of active expiration with contraction of abdominal muscles + contraction of internal intercostal muscles

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7
Q

Pressure-volume curve of lungs

A

At atmospheric pressure, there is still small volume of gas in the lung
This is called minimal volume - difficult to remove due to closure of small airways

Non-linear relationship

Hysteresis - behaviour in expiration lags behind behaviour in inspiration

Get the same curve if using negative or positive pressures

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8
Q

Compliance definition

A

Change in volume / Change in pressure

Units = ml/cmH2O

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9
Q

Normal compliance of lung

A

~ 200 ml/cmH2O

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10
Q

Examples where compliance is reduced

A
  • Pulmonary fibrosis
  • Pulmonary oedema

Lung tissue stiffer

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11
Q

Examples where compliance is increased

A
  • Emphysema
  • Increased age

Loss of lung architecture and loss of elastic recoil

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12
Q

Proteins contributing to elastic properties / compliance of the lung

A

Collagen
Elastin

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13
Q

Factors contributing to elastic properties / compliance of the lung

A

Change in lung protein geometry

Surface tension of alveolar lining fluid

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14
Q

Surface tension definition

A

Total force across imaginary line 1cm across the surface

Picture A

Molecules of water attract each other more than they attract molecules of air

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15
Q

Units of surface tension

A

dynes / cm

or

milli-Newtons / m

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16
Q

Features of surface tension on a curved surface

A

On a curved surface, surface tension produces pressure

Picture B

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17
Q

Laplace’s law

A

Relates to pressure in a soap bubble

Pressure = 4 x surface tension / radius

P = 4T / r

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18
Q

Implication of Laplace’s law

A

Pressure is higher in spheres of smaller radius, and therefore they inflate the larger spheres

Picture C

19
Q

Pressure-volume curve of lung when inflated with fluid vs air

A

Easier to inflate lung with fluid than with air, with less hysteresis

Due to loss of surface tension when fluid used to inflate lung

20
Q

Surfactant definition

A

Material which reduces surface tension of alveolar layer

21
Q

Effect of surfactant on surface tension

A

Surface tension does not change with changes in area with water

Detergent reduces the surface tension but again unaffected by area changes

Surfactant results in surface tension altering with changes in area.
Surface tension very low at lower area %
Therefore aids inflation with air and elastic recoil at higher area %

22
Q

Main constituent of pulmonary surfactants

A

Dipalmitoylphosphatidylcholine
(DPPC)

Phospholipid

23
Q

What produces pulmonary surfactants

A

Type 2 alveolar epithelial cells

Secreted as lamellar inclusion bodies

24
Q

3 functions of surfactant

A

Increases compliance of lung

Increases stability of the lung

Reduces tendency to alveolar oedema

25
Q

How does surfactant increase pulmonary compliance

A

Reduced surface tension at lower areas so easier to inflate

Higher surface tension at higher areas so elastic recoil

26
Q

How does surfactant increase stability of lung

A

Due to lower surface tension at lower areas and higher at higher areas, you do not see smaller alveoli inflating larger alveoli as you might expect according to Laplace’s law

27
Q

How does surfactant reduce tendency to alveoli oedema

A

Reduced pressure in alveoli
Therefore reduced capillary all tension surrounding alveoli

Therefore reduced hydrostatic pressure of capillary and fluid more likely to move into capillary and less likely to form oedema

28
Q

Effect of lung if no surfactant was present

A

Significant atelectasis

As seen in premature new-borns where surfactant not yet produced

29
Q

Infant respiratory distress syndrome

A

No surfactant - commonly in premature babies

Treat by giving artificial surfactant

30
Q

Regional differences of lung ventilation at FRC

A

Weight of lung results in different pressures in apex vs base of lung

Greater negative pressure at apex so on different part of curve

Base at a steeper part so change in pressure results in greater change in volume compared with apex

31
Q

Regional differences of lung ventilation at residual volume

A

Pressures are less negative
Pressure at base above atmospheric pressure

Therefore no ventilation at bases occur until pressure falls below atmospheric pressure

More likely to have airway closure at higher volumes with increasing age or diseased lungs

32
Q

Patterns of gas flow in tubes

A

Move from A -> B -> C as flow rate is increased

33
Q

Poiseuille equation for laminar flow

A

Note resistance is inversely proportional to radius to 4th power

34
Q

Velocity profile of laminar flow

A

Flow rate at centre of tube is higher than elsewhere in the tube

35
Q

Reynold’s number

A

Likelihood of turbulent flow

36
Q

Pressure / Volume / Flow changes during breathing cycle

A
37
Q

Number of airways with each generation

A

Exponentially increases
Therefore very large number of smaller airways

38
Q

Where in airways is there the most resistance

A

Medium sized airways

Higher resistance with smaller radius but due to vastly high numbers, the resistance is shared more and therefore less for each airway

39
Q

What happens to airway resistance as volume increases

A

Airway resistance decreases as volume increases

This is because radial traction from lung parenchyma increases radius of airways and pulls them open (similar concept to blood vessel effects)

Explains why patients with lung disease (eg COPD) breath with higher lung volumes

40
Q

Flow-Volume curves with spirometry

A

A = maximal effort
C = not maximal effort
B = low effort then maximal effort at the end

Cannot exceed downslope flow, always meets it

41
Q

Isovolume pressure-flow curves

A

At different lung volumes, expiratory flow is independent of effort exerted

I.e, reach a maximum expiratory flow which cannot be exceeded

42
Q

Reason that expiratory flow is independent of effort exerted at fixed lung volumes

A

Dynamic compression

During inspiration as intrapleural pressure decreases, airways are pulled open with radial traction

This is not present in expiration and in fact has opposite effect as transpulmonary pressure increases inwards causing airway compression / collapse

Increase in transpulmonary pressure matches increase in alveolar pressure and therefore flow remains constant regardless of effort

43
Q

Tissue resistance

A

Resistance from tissue sliding over another

Not as important / notable as airway resistance

44
Q

Work done by the lung during inspiration

A

In absence of airway resistance, work done would be area from line AEC to D to 0

Additional work done with airway resistance is represented by the shaded curve