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Pulmonary Mechanics

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Role of surfactant. Understand the role of resistance in determining air flow ... Surfactant moves in and out of the lining monolayer, main-taining intermolecular ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Pulmonary Mechanics


1
Pulmonary Mechanics
HuBio 541 The Respiratory System
  • Bill Altemeier, M.D.
  • billa_at_u.washington.edu

2
Primary Function of the Lung
  • Bring in oxygen for delivery to tissues and
    remove carbon dioxide from blood
  • Accomplished through tidal breathing
  • Inspired, fresh air is distributed via the
    airways to the gas exchanging regions or alveoli
  • Oxygen depleted, carbon dioxide containing gas is
    exhaled via same airways
  • Air, like any gas or fluid, moves from areas of
    higher pressure to lower pressure

3
The Engineering Problem
  • The lung cannot expand itself, it can only move
    passively in response to external pressures
  • Two ways to get air into the lung
  • Create a positive pressure at the airway opening
    to push air into the lung
  • Orcreate a negative pressure within the lung as
    occurs in free breathing humans

4
Goals
  • Understand how a pressure gradient is generated
    during respiration
  • Negative pressure pump system
  • Elastic properties of the lung and chest wall
  • Role of surfactant
  • Understand the role of resistance in determining
    air flow
  • Put it together to begin understanding the work
    of breathing

5
Boyles Law - How gas gets into the lungs
6
Mechanics of Respiration
7
Elasticity - The Capability of a Strained Body to
Return to an Unstressed Position
8
Elasticity - The Capability of a Strained Body to
Return to an Unstressed Position
9
Recoil Pressure or Transmural Pressure
Recoil Pressure Pressureinside - Pressureoutside
10
Elastic Properties of the Lung
Volume
11
Inflation of the Lung at Different Transmural
Pressures
12
Recoil Pressure
Recoil Pressure Pressureinside - Pressureoutside
13
Elastic Properties of the Chest
14
Combining Two Elastic Structures
15
Putting the Respiratory System Together
16
Example of Lung Recoil
  • Pneumothorax
  • Penetration of chest wall allows Air into pleural
    space, eliminating negative pleural pressure
  • Loss of pleural pressure decouples lung and chest
    wall
  • Lung collapses to its resting volume

17
Compliance
  • Is a measure of the distensibility of a
    structure how much pressure need be applied to
    get a given change in volume
  • Mathematically
  • Compliance ?V/?P
  • Graphically it is the slope of the pressure
    volume curve of the structure

18
Measurement of Compliance
19
Compliance in Disease - Fibrosis
20
Compliance in Disease - Emphysema
21
The Real World - Alveoli
  • So far, we have dealt with the lung as if it were
    a single giant alveolus
  • In reality, the lung is made up of millions of
    tiny air sacs, each of which is fluid-lined but
    air filled
  • Elastic property of the lung is a combination of
    the elastic fibers throughout the alveolar wall
    structure and surface tension of the alveolar
    lining fluid

22
Surface Tension
Molecular interactions resulting from hydrogen
bonds between water molecules in liquid but not
between water and air
23
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24
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25
LaPlaces Law
  • P 2T/r
  • Pressure 2Wall Tension/sphere radius

T
26
Surface Tension Alveolar Instability
27
Surfactant Solution
Surfactant 1) Reduces surface tension 2)
Prevents alveolar collapse 3) Reduces work of
breathing 4) Prevents alveolar flooding
28
The Alveolus
29
Surfactant Dynamics
  • Surfactant moves in and out of the lining
    monolayer, main-taining intermolecular distance
    and low surface tension across a range of lung
    volume

30
Resistance
  • The flow of gas or fluid in a tubular structure
    depends on the magnitude of the pressure
    difference and the resistance of the tube
  • Flow Pressure difference / Resistance
  • V ?P/R

31
Resistance
  • Resistance to airflow
  • increases with increasing viscosity of gas
  • is directly proportional to the length of the
    airway
  • increases with 1/radius4 (if the radius halves
    resistance increases 16 fold)

32
Airway Caliber
  • Airway diameter is affected by
  • anatomy (the more distal the smaller)
  • lung volume
  • pressure across the airway wall
  • bronchial smooth muscle contraction
  • secretions

33
Airway Resistance as a Function of Lung Volume
Airway resistance increases as lung volume
decreases
34
Recoil of the Lung Tissue Holds Airways Open
35
Inspiration
36
Passive Expiration
37
Forced Expiration
38
Airflow as a Function of Lung Volume
39
Airflow as a Function of Lung Volume
Flow (L/sec)
40
Effort Independent Flow Rates
41
Clinical Measurements of Lung Mechanics
  • Volumes of the respiratory system
  • Flows of gas out of the respiratory system
  • Resistance during flow
  • Diffusion of gas within the lung

42
Spirometry - Measurement of Lung Volumes and Flow
Rates
43
Volumes do not overlap Capacities are
combinations of volumes Spirogram is
displacement from FRC
44
Measurement of Airflow Obstruction
  • FEV1 - volume exhaled in the first second of a
    forced exhalation
  • FVC - forced vital capacity or the total volume
    exhaled during forced exhalation
  • FEV1/FVC is a measure of airflow obstruction

45
Some Diseases We Can Diagnose with Pulmonary
Testing
  • Obstructive Lung Diseases
  • Asthma
  • COPD
  • Restrictive Lung Diseases
  • Fibrosis
  • Muscle Weakness

46
Work of Breathing
  • In the respiratory system work is proportional to
    the product of the pressure applied and the
    change in volume
  • Work in the respiratory system is of 2 kinds
  • elastic work to overcome the recoil pressure of
    the lung and chest wall
  • resistive work to overcome the resistance to
    airflow in the airway (and a small amount of
    tissue resistance)

47
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48
Important Take Home Points
  • The elastic properties of the respiratory system
  • Calculating recoil pressures of the lung, chest,
    and the combination of the two
  • Understanding the interaction of lung and chest
    and how they define various spirometry values
  • Divisions of lung volumes and capacities
  • The role of surfactant in lung elasticity
  • Airway resistance
  • Lung volume dependency
  • Development of dynamic airway collapse during
    forced exhalation and the resultant effort
    independence of mid-exhalation flows
  • The work of respiration
  • Contributions of airway resistance and elasticity
    at different lung volumes
  • How various diseases will affect the work of
    breathing
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