Title: The Why of Pulmonary Ventilation
1The Why of Pulmonary Ventilation
- Four specific purposes
- Exchange of O2
- Exchange of CO2
- Control of blood acidity
- Oral communication
2Rhythmicity of Ventilation
- Complex neural control mechanism makes normal
breathing unnoticed, unconscious - Inhalation Exhalation are regulated in two
basic ways by frequency and by amount or volume - Complex conscious breathing patterns can be
learned and precisely integrated into motor
performance?automatic and nearly unconscious
3Environmental Influences on Pulmonary Gas Volumes
- Environmental conditions have significant effect
on pulmonary gas volumes - Pulmonary gas volumes can be presented under
three (3) conditions or standards - STPD-VO2 in liters . min-1
- BTPS-VE in liters . min-1
- ATPS-VI in liters . min-1
4Pressure Relationships in Thoracic Cavity
- Atmospheric pressure (Patm) - pressure exerted by
the air surrounding the body - Sea level 760 mm Hg
- Intrapulmonary pressure pressure within the
alveoli, that rises falls with phases of
breathing (761-759) - Intrapleural pressure within the pleual cavity
(usually 4 mm Hg less than alveoli)
5Pulmonary Pressures
6Minute Ventilation
- Definition
- Rest
- During Exercise
- Hyperventilation
- Ventilation and the Anaerobic Threshold
7Lung Volume or Capacity
- Tidal Volume (TV) 500 mL
- Inspiratory reserve volume (IRV) 3100 mL
- Expiratory reserve volume (ERV) 1200 mL
- Residual volume (RV) 1200 mL
- Vital capacity 4800 mL
- Total lung capacity 6000 mL
8Dynamic Lung Measures
- Maximum Voluntary Ventilation (MVV)
- Forced Vital Capacity (FEV1.0)
9The How of Ventilation
- Setting up of diffusion or pressure gradients
- Between respiring cells and atmosphere
- Minimize diffusion distances between alveoli
surrounding capillaries - Optimization of O2 CO2 transport
- Control of ventilation rate
- Medulla - receives input from the brain (neural
factors) receptors from lungs and skeletal
muscle (peripheral) other inputs are bloodborne
(humoral)
10Muscles of Respiration
- Inspiration - Diaphragm, external intercostals
contract, scalenes elevate ribs 1 2,
sternocleidomastoid elevates the
sternum---gtintrapulmonary pressure ? momentarily
atmospheric air moves in - Expiration - external intercostals relax along
with diaphragm decreasing volume of thorax
transiently ? intrapulmonary pressure forcing
pulmonary air out
11Control of Ventilation
- Pneumotaxic center - pons - stimulates expiration
center - Apneustic center - pons - stimulates inspiratory
center - Medullary expiratory center
- Medullary inspiratory center
- Phrenic and intercostal nerves
- Humoral - Any substance that circulates in the
blood and that has general effects at a site
removed from location of secretion of substance
humor.
12Gas Exchange - Diffusion
- Partial Pressure of Gases
- PO2 and PCO2
- Partial pressure of oxygen in alveoli 105 mm Hg
- Solubility of O2 in body water at 37oC is low
- Rely on erythrocytes containing heme-iron
compound - hemoglobin - which binds oxygen
according to its partial pressure - Hemoglobin usually nearly 100 saturated with O2
13Changes in Ventilation Rest Exercise -Recovery
- Rapid increase w/in seconds
- Replaced with a slower rise
- Steady state
- Sudden decrease
- Slow gradual decline
14Pulmonary Limitations in Highly Trained Athletes
- Adequacy of ventilatory system during maximal
exercise - They observed decreases in PaO2 (hypoxemia, low
blood oxygen) - Ve during exercise approaches a limit imposed by
ability to generate expiratory and inspiratory
flows and pressures
15Ventilatory Threshold The sing talk test
16Application of the Ventilatory Threshold
- How does the ventilation slope differ in this
picture from previous slide? - http//www.usidr.org/Running20University/RULectur
e1.htm
17Application of the Ventilatory Threshold
- What do you think?
- Agree?
- Disagree?
18Respiration
- External respiration movement of oxygen
carbon dioxide down pressure gradients (pulmonary
capillary blood and air in alveoli - Internal respiration capillary blood of
systemic circulation and cell being perfused with
blood
19Gas Partial Pressures
- Atmospheric air
- Alveolar air
20Diffusion Capacity
21Pulmonary Diffusion
22Pulmonary Perfusion
- Definition passage of blood or other fluid
through a vascular bed - Balance between perfusion and ventilation
- Non-linear increase in ventilation (5-190 l/min)
- Cardiac output - increases from 5 l/min -
25 to 30 l/min
23Blood Hemoglobin Concentration, Hematocrit
- Before After Change
- Variable Training Training ()
- Hb (g/dl) 15.3 15.1 -1
- Blood Vol 5.25 6.58 25
- Total Hb (g) 803 994 24
- Arterial O2 20.8 20.5
- (ml/dl)
- Hematocrit 42 41 -2
- ()
24Solubility and diffusion Characteristics of
Respiratory Gases
- Gas Solubility Diffusing Cap Diffusing Cap
- Rest Exercise
- (ml/min/mmHg) (ml/min/mmHg)
- Oxygen 0.024 20 65
- CO2 0.57 400 1300
25Gas Exchange
- Entry of O2 into blood
- We ventilate to keep the partial pressure of O2
at 105 mmHg - Diffusion distance for O2 into erythrocytes is
short - Short distance is necessary - low solubility of
O2 in body water - Erythrocytes contain the heme-iron compound
hemoglobin which binds O2 based on partial
pressure
26Oxygen Transport
- 1.34 ml of O2 per g of Hb (15 g Hb/100 ml)
- 1.34 x 15 20 ml O2 / 100 ml blood
- Partial pressure effect
- Temperature, H, and 2,3-diphosphoglycerate
(2,3-DPG) 2,3 DPG levels are higher at altitude
- Helps tissues obtain more O2
27Oxyhemoglobin Dissociation Curve
28Oxyhemoglobin Dissociation Curve
29pH, PCO2, Temperature on Hemoglobin Saturation
- Influence hemoglobin saturation by modifying Hbs
3-dimensional structure - Increases in PCO2, H content of blood,
temperature decrease Hbs affinity for O2 - Curve shifts to the right - enhancing oxygen
unloading from the blood - These factors (2,3 biphosphoglycerate) are at
their highest levels in systemic capillaries
where oxygen unloading is the goal - Declining pH weakens the Hb-O2 bond - this is
called the Bohr effect
30Hemoglobin - Nitric Oxide
- Nitric oxide (NO) - secreted by cells of lungs
and vascular endothelial cells - Vasodilator - plays role in BP regulation
- Hemoglobins heme (iron group) detroys NO -
therefore, reputation as a vasoconstrictor - Yet, local vessels dilate where gases are being
unloaded and loaded - Recent research a second (non-respiratory)
hemoglobin cycle involving NO - NO latches onto Hb following oxygen loading in
lungs (chemically protected from heme)
31Carbon Dioxide Transport
- Carbon dioxide transported in following forms
- Dissolved in plasma (least amount - 7-10)
- Chemically bound to hemoglobin in red blood cells
(20-30) - called carbaminohemoglobin HbCO2 - Bicarbonate ion in plasma (highest amount -
60-70) (HCO3-) - Carbaminohemoglobin
- CO2 binds to amino acids of globin (not heme)
therefore, does not compete with oxygen or NO - CO2 rapidly dissociates from Hb in lungs where
PCO2 is lower than in blood
32Bicarbonate (HCO3-) Ion in Plasma
- CO2 diffuses into RBCs combines with water (CO2
H2O ----gt H2CO3 (carbonic acid) - Carbonic acid is unstable and quickly dissociates
into H HCO3- - H ions bind to Hb triggering Bohr effect - thus
oxygen release is enhanced by carbon dioxide
loading in tissues - HCO3- ion diffuse rapidly into plasma (after
exchanging with chloride ion (Cl-) and carried to
lungs (Cl- - HCO3- exchange protein transporter) - In lungs HCO3- diffuses back into RBC and binds
with H to form carbonic acid CO2 H2O --? H2CO3
33Bicarbonate (HCO3-) Ion in Plasma (contd)
- H formed from carbonic acid dissociation reacts
rapidly with reduced Hb (hemoglobin that has
dissociated its O2) - Reduced Hb is a strong buffer taking up much of
H formed as a result of CO2 transport
34The Red Blood Cell and Hb inCO2 Transport
- 5-7 CO2 transported in dissolved form
- RBC contains carbonic anhydrase in addition to
hemoglobin - CO2 H2O ---gt H2 CO2 (formed very quickly in
RBC) - H2 CO2 ----gt HCO3- H
35Anatomy Physiology of the Heart
- Atrium (R L) - thin-walled, low-pressure
chambers that serve as resevoirs for ventricles - Ventricles (R L) - smaller rt ventricle pumps
blood into pulmonary artery to lungs larger more
muscular left ventricle pumps blood to aorta
general circulation - Valves - Tricuspid valve (rt) mitral valve (lt)
pulmonary and aortic valves - Myocardium - cardiac muscle striated
involuntary has inherent rhythmicity - contracts
at regular intervals
36Specialized Conduction System
- Sequence of Activation Conduction Vel Time
Rate - (M/sec)
(Sec) (B/min) - SA Node .15
60-100 - AV Node 0.02-0.05
- AV Bundle 1.2-2.0
0.08 40-45 - Bundle Branches 2.0-4.0
25-40 - Purkinje Network
37Cardiac Cycle
- Diastole Systole
- Atria act as reservoirs for the ventricles and
during exercise as primer pumps - Walls of left ventricle are thicker than those of
the right due to peripheral resistance - Amount of blood ejected from each ventricle
stroke volume (SV) - SV difference between peak ventricular filling
(end-diastolic volume) - ventricular emptying
(end-systolic volume) - Percentage of end-diastolic volume pumped from
ventricles ejection fraction
38Training and the ECG
- Appearance of the sinus bradycardia - as low as
28 beats/min - Probable cause reduction from sympathetic n. s.
increased stimulation of parasympathetic n. s. - Possibly a lower intrinsic rate
39Ventilatory Threshold
- With training the ventilatory threshold shifts to
the right - With over-training, the curve would shift back
towards the left