Title: Respiratory physiology
1Respiratory physiology
2Respiration is the process by which the body
takes in and utilizes oxygen (O2) and gets rid of
carbon dioxide (CO2).
3Respiration can be divided into four major
functional events
- Ventilation Movement of air into and out of
lungs - Gas exchange between air in lungs and blood
- Transport of oxygen and carbon dioxide in the
blood - Internal respiration Gas exchange between the
blood and tissues
4Respiratory System Functions
- Gas exchange Oxygen enters blood and carbon
dioxide leaves - Regulation of blood pH Altered by changing blood
carbon dioxide levels - Voice production Movement of air past vocal
folds makes sound and speech - Olfaction Smell occurs when airborne molecules
drawn into nasal cavity - Protection Against microorganisms by preventing
entry and removing them
5Section 1 Pulmonary Ventilation Pulmonary
ventilation means the inflow and outflow of air
between the atmosphere and the lung alveoli,
which is determined by the activity of the
airways, the alveolus and the thoracic cage.
6I Functions of the Respiratory Passageways
7Respiratory System Divisions
- Upper tract
- Nose, pharynx and associated structures
- Lower tract
- Larynx, trachea, bronchi, lungs
8Conducting Zone
- All the structures air passes through before
reaching the respiratory zone. - Cartilage holds tube system open and smooth
muscle controls tube diameter - Warms and humidifies inspired air.
- Filters and cleans
Insert fig. 16.5
9Respiratory Zone
- Region of gas exchange between air and blood.
- Includes respiratory bronchioles and alveolar
sacs.
10Airway branching
11Bronchioles and Alveoli
12Thoracic Walls and Muscles of Respiration
13Breathing
- Occurs because the thoracic cavity changes volume
- Insipiration uses external intercostals and
diaphragm - Expiration is passive at rest, but uses internal
intercostals and abdominals during severe
respiratory load - Breathing rate is 10-20 breaths / minute at rest,
40 - 45 at maximum exercise in adults
14Thoracic Volume
15Pleura
16- Pleural fluid produced by pleural membranes
- Acts as lubricant
- Helps hold parietal and visceral pleural
membranes together
17Ventilation
- Movement of air into and out of lungs
- Air moves from area of higher pressure to area of
lower pressure - Pressure is inversely related to volume
18Alveolar Pressure Changes During Respiration
19Principles of Breathing
Functional Unit Chest Wall and Lung
Follows Boyles LawPressure (P) x Volume (V)
Constant
20Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
PS
D
1
21Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
- At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
- Inhalation
- Increase Volume of Rib cage
- Decrease the pleural cavity pressure- Decrease
in Pressure inside (Pi) lungs
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
PS
CW
D
2
22Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
- At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
- Inhalation
- Pb outside is now greater than Pi- Air flows
down pressure gradient - Until Pi Pb
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
CW
PS
D
3
23Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
- At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
- Exhalation Opposite Process
- Decrease Rib Cage Volume
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
CW
PS
D
4
24Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
- At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
- Exhalation Opposite Process
- Decrease Rib Cage Volume
- Increase in pleural cavity pressure -
Increase Pi
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
CW
PS
D
5
25Principle of Breathing
Follows Boyles Law PV C
- At Rest with mouth open Pb Pi 0
- Exhalation Opposite Process
- Decrease Rib Cage Volume
- Increase Pi
- Pi is greater than Pb
- Air flows down pressure gradient
- Until Pi Pb again
Pb
Airway Open
A
Pi
CW
PS
D
6
26Mechanisms of Breathing How do we change the
volume of the rib cage ?
- To Inhale is an ACTIVE process
- Diaphragm
- External Intercostal Muscles
Both actions occur simultaneously otherwise not
effective
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30II Respiratory Resistance Including Elastic
Resistance and Inelastic resistance
31Elastic Resistance A lung may be considered as an
elastic sac. The thoracic wall also can be
considered as an elastic element. So during
inspiration the inspiratory muscles must expand
the thoracic cage which are together with the
elastic resistance.
32Elasticity
- Tendency to return to initial size after
distension. - High content of elastin proteins.
- Very elastic and resist distension.
- Recoil ability.
- Elastic tension increases during inspiration and
is reduced by recoil during expiration.
33Compliance
- Distensibility (stretchability)
- Ease with which the lungs can expand.
- The compliance is inversely proportional to
elastic resistance - Change in lung volume per change in
transpulmonary pressure. - DV/DP
- 100 x more distensible than a balloon.
34Static lung compliance
C DV/DP
100
deflation
Lung volume (TLC)
50
normal breathing
inflation
0
0
30
Transpulmonary pressure (cmH2O)
35- The elastic forces can be divided into two parts
- the elastic forces of the lung tissue itself
- 2) the elastic forces caused by surface tension
of the fluid that lines the inside wall of the
alveoli. - The elastic forces caused by surface tension are
much more complex. Surface tension accounts for
about two thirds of the total elastic forces in a
normal lungs.
36Surface Tension
- Force exerted by fluid in alveoli to resist
distension - Lungs secrete and absorb fluid, leaving a very
thin film of fluid. - This film of fluid causes surface tension..
- H20 molecules at the surface are attracted to
other H20 molecules by attractive forces. - Force is directed inward, raising pressure in
alveoli.
37What is Surface Tension ?
38Surface Tension
- Law of Laplace
- Pressure in alveoli is directly proportional to
surface tension and inversely proportional to
radius of alveoli. - Pressure in smaller alveolus would be greater
than in larger alveolus, if surface tension were
the same in both.
Insert fig. 16.11
39Effect of Surface Tension on Alveoli size
40Surfactant
- Phospholipid produced by alveolar type II cells.
- Lowers surface tension.
- Reduces attractive forces of hydrogen bonding by
becoming interspersed between H20 molecules. - Surface tension in alveoli is reduced.
- As alveoli radius decreases, surfactants ability
to lower surface tension increases.
41Area dependence of Surfactant action
42Surfactant prevents alveolar collapse
43Factors Contributing to Compliance - Hysteresis
Volume L
6
3
Without surfactant
RV
0
Pleural Pressure
- 30 cm H2O
0
- 15
44Inelastic Resistance The inelastic resistance
comprises the airway resistance (friction) and
pulmonary tissue resistance (viscosity, and
inertia). Of these the airway resistance is by
far the more important both in health and
disease. It account for 80-90 of the inelastic
resistance.
45Airway Resistance
- Airway resistance is the resistance to flow of
air in the airways and is due to - 1) internal friction between gas molecules
- 2) friction between gas molecules and the walls
of the airways
46Types of Flow
47Laminar flow
- is when concentric layers of gas flow parallel
to the wall of the tube. The velocity profile
obeys Poiseuilles Law (pg 4311)
48Poiseuille and Resistance
- Airway Radius or diameter is KEY.
- ? radius by 1/2 ? resistance by 16 FOLD - think
bronchodilator here!!
49Airway resistance increase
- Any factor that decreases airway diameter, or
increases turbulence will increase airway
resistance, eg - Rapid breathing because air velocity and hence
turbulence increases - Narrowing airways as in asthma, parasympathetic
stimulation, etc. - Emphysema, which decreases small airway diameter
during forced expiration
50Control of Airway Smooth Muscle
- Neural control
- Adrenergic beta receptors causing dilatation
- Parasympathetic-muscarinic receptors causing
constriction - NANC nerves (non-adrenergic, non-cholinergic)
- Inhibitory release VIP and NO ? bronchodilitation
- Stimulatory ? bronchoconstriction, mucous
secretion, vascular hyperpermeability, cough,
vasodilation neurogenic inflammation
51Control of Airway Smooth Muscle (cont.)
- Local factors
- histamine binds to H1 receptors-constriction
- histamine binds to H2 receptors-dilation
- slow reactive substance of anaphylaxsis-constricti
on-allergic response to pollen - Prostaglandins E series- dilation
- Prostaglandins F series- constriction
52Control of Airway Smooth Muscle (cont)
- Environmental pollution
- smoke, dust, sulfur dioxide, some acidic elements
in smog - elicit constriction of airways
- mediated by
- parasympathetic reflex
- local constrictor responses
53III Pulmonary Volume and Capacity
54(No Transcript)
55Pulmonary Volumes
- Tidal volume
- Volume of air inspired or expired during a normal
inspiration or expiration (400 500 ml) - Inspiratory reserve volume
- Amount of air inspired forcefully after
inspiration of normal tidal volume (1500 2000
ml) - Expiratory reserve volume
- Amount of air forcefully expired after expiration
of normal tidal volume (900 1200 ml) - Residual volume
- Volume of air remaining in respiratory passages
and lungs after the most forceful expiration
(1500 ml in male and 1000 ml in female)
56(No Transcript)
57Pulmonary Capacities
- Inspiratory capacity
- Tidal volume plus inspiratory reserve volume
- Functional residual capacity
- Expiratory reserve volume plus the residual
volume - Vital capacity
- Sum of inspiratory reserve volume, tidal volume,
and expiratory reserve volume - Total lung capacity
- Sum of inspiratory and expiratory reserve volumes
plus the tidal volume and residual volume
58(No Transcript)
59Minute and Alveolar Ventilation
- Minute ventilation Total amount of air moved
into and out of respiratory system per minute - Respiratory rate or frequency Number of breaths
taken per minute - Anatomic dead space Part of respiratory system
where gas exchange does not take place - Alveolar ventilation How much air per minute
enters the parts of the respiratory system in
which gas exchange takes place
60Dead Space
- Area where gas exchange cannot occur
- Includes most of airway volume
- Anatomical dead space (150 ml)
- Airways
- Physiological dead space
- anatomical non functional alveoli
61Basic Structure of the Lung
NO GAS EXCHANGE
DEAD SPACE
Formula Total Ventilation Dead Space
Alveolar Space VT VD VA
62Similar Concept Physiological Dead Space
Healthy Lungs
Diseased lungs
63FVC - forced vital capacity
- defines maximum volume of exchangeable air in
lung (vital capacity) - forced expiratory breathing maneuver
- requires muscular effort and some patient
training - initial (healthy) FVC values approx 4 liters
- slowly diminishes with normal aging
- significantly reduced FVC suggests damage to lung
parenchyma - restrictive lung disease (fibrosis)
- constructive lung disease
- loss of functional alveolar tissue (atelectasis)
- FVC volume reduction trend over time (years) is
key indicator - intra-subject variability factors
- age
- sex
- height
- ethnicity
64FEV1 - forced expiratory volume (1 second)
- defines maximum air flow rate out of lung in
initial 1 second interval - forced expiratory breathing maneuver
- requires muscular effort and some patient
training - FEV1/FVC ratio
- normal FEV1 about 3 liters
- FEV1 needs to be normalized to individuals vital
capacity (FVC) - typical normal FEV1/FVC ratio 3 liters/ 4
liters 0.75 - standard screening measure for obstructive lung
disease (COPD) - FEV1/FVC reduction trend over time (years) is key
indicator - calculate predicted FEV1/FVC (age and height
normalized) - reduced FEV1/FVC suggests obstructive damage to
lung airways - episodic, reversible by bronchodilator drugs
- probably asthma
- continual, irreversible by bronchodilator drugs
- probably COPD
65Spirometry
Total Lung Capacity
Forced Vital Capacity - FVC
Residual Volume
66Assessment of RESTRICTIVE Lung Diseases
These are diseases that reduce the effective
surface area available for gas exchange
eg fibrosis / pulmonary oedema
67(No Transcript)
68Assessment of OBSTRUCTIVE Lung Diseases
These are diseases that reduce the diameter of
the airways and increase airway resistance
- remember Resistance increases with 1/radius 4
eg asthma / bronchitis
69Forced Vital Capacity - FVC
FEV1 gt 80 of FVC is Normal or in words - you
should be able to forcibly expire more than 80
of your vital capacity in 1 sec.
Forced Expiratory Volume in 1 sec - FEV1
70OBSTRUCTIVE lung disease
FEV1 lt 80 of FVC
71(No Transcript)