Respiratory System Flashcards

0
Q

Describe elements of the upper respiratory tract.

A
Nostrils
- horses can only breath through their nose
- cartilage maintains the nasal structure when breathing
Nasal passage
- maxillary bone 
- nasal bone
- hard plate
- mucous membrane over turbinates
- cilia line nasal Passage to trap particals
Pharynx
- chamber at the back of nasal passages
- where the oesophagus meets the trachea
- epiglottis overlaps to protect windpipe when swallowing 
Trachea
- aka windpipe
- cilia line trachea 
Branches near lungs into each sac
- cartilage holds it ridged and open
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1
Q

What are the functions of the respiratory system?

A
  • Transfer of O2 to the RBC and body
  • to inhale (O2 access) and exhale (remove CO2)
  • Thermoregulation of air in the body (warm air exhaled = eat loss)
  • assist in defication (increase pressure in the abdominal cavity)
  • communication (snorting)
  • sensory input (detect chemicals)
  • trap contaminants
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2
Q

Describe the components of the lower respiratory tract.

A
  • Horses lung capacity = 43,000 cm3
    Bronchi
  • initial divide of network o branches in the lungs
    Bronchioles
  • narrow tubes which get narrower until they become Alveoli
    Alveoli important in gas exchange
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3
Q

What occurs when a horse inhales and exhales?

A
Inhalation
- the rubs expand by use of intercostal muscles and diaphragm 
- pressure in the lungs drop 
- air is drawn in as a result
Exhalation
- passive process
- cheat volume decreases
Pressure in thoratic cavity increases
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4
Q

What is the principle of gaseous exchange?

A

O2 transfer from out of body into the bloodstream.

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5
Q

What re they main components of air?

A

Nitrogen -70.01%
Oxygen - 20.95%
CO2 and H2O vapour - 0.04%

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6
Q

What are alveoli responsible for?? What’s involved in this?

A
  • Responsible for gaseous exchange
  • deoxygenated blood passes alveoli and O2 defuses across to blood
  • blood binds with haemoglobin
  • CO2 diffuses into the lungs and pushed out of be body.
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7
Q

What gases are in exhaled air?

A

Nitrogen - 79.5%
Oxygen - 16.4%
CO2 and H2O vapour - 4.1%

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8
Q

What is the respiration rate for a resting and exercised horse?

A

Resting (slightly fast for young horses)
6-16brpm
Max Exercised
120brpm

  • when fitness is increased the muscles involved in respiration develop
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9
Q

What is pulmonary capilliarisation?

A
  • Increase in capillaries around alveoli
  • increases O2 into blood
  • improves with exercise
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10
Q

What is alveoli recruitment?

A
  • more alveoli are used in respiration
  • increases the surface area of lungs
  • improves gaseous exchange
  • occurs when horse gets fitter
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11
Q

What is the ratio of stride rate to breath when a horse is running in locomotory respiration coupling? Why?

A

1: 1
- ensures that locomotion doesn’t interfere with ventilation
- caps the maximum brpm at 150 and max stride rate

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12
Q

What anatomical changes occur when a horse runs?

A
  • dilation of nostrils
  • dilation of nasalpharynx and larynx
  • straightening of the respiratory tract
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13
Q

Tell me…

  1. what the total long capacity is
  2. The vital capacity
  3. Normal capacity
  4. Tidal air (quiet normal) usage
A
  1. 42,000cm3
  2. 30,000cm3
  3. 24,000cm3
  4. 6000cm3
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14
Q

What is dead space and where is it found?

A
  • found in air passages between nostrils and the alveoli
  • 1 makes up about 2000cm3
  • no gaseous exchange occurs here
  • it’s role is to mix the air from out of the body to humidify and warm (protects the alveoli from sudden changes in temperature)
  • unused alveoli also count as dead space
  • at rest a late proportion aren’t used
  • increased strenuous exercise will cause the use of more alveoli
  • alveoli dead space reduces to near zero
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15
Q

What happens to the body when the fitness increases

A
  • Increased heart rate
  • pulmonary capilliarisation
  • increase RBC
  • slower rest rate
  • better recovery rate
  • less dramatic change in heart rate and respiratory rate every time the horse exercises
16
Q

Describe the issues of respiratory diseases an where it stems from.

A
  • serious and common for equine sports
  • exercise use lungs 5x more so any minor issue is a big problem
  • anthropogenic influences on respiratory disease eg keeping horses In stables (causes many problems).
17
Q

What bacterial infections are there?

A
  • pneumonia (Rhodococcus equi)

- strangles ( Streptococcus equi)

18
Q

When do bacterial infections occur?

A
  • Bacterial infections rely on dust in the atmosphere
  • problematic for stable kept horses
  • prevalent in horses that travel eg race horses.
19
Q

Talk of two viral infections in horses.

A

Equine influenza

  • dry and frequent cough at rest
  • fever after 3 days incubation
  • large lymph glands

Equine herpes virus I and II

  • mild respiratory problems and nasal discharge
  • stay dormant in body until times of stress
20
Q

What is exercises induced pulmonary haemorrhage (EIPH)?

A
  • bleeding in air passages after exercise (epistaxis) - only seen by nose bleed
  • blood enters lungs due to fractures in lung capillaries
  • lung function decreases due to scarring
  • require endoscopic diagnosis
21
Q

What is Cronin Obstructive Pulmonary Disease (COPD)?

A
  • similar to Human athsma
  • cased by allergic reaction to hay or bedding

Symptoms

  • heavy reoccurnence
  • airway obstruction
  • Broken wind
  • emphysema
  • chronic bronchitis
  • small airway disease