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Respiratory System John P. McDonough, CRNA, Ed.D., ARNP
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Pulmonary System Structures n Lungs n Airways –(upper & lower) n Vasulature n Chest wall
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Lungs n Right –upper, middle & lower n Left –upper & lower n Lobes segment lobules n Mediastinum –contains heart, great vessels, esophagus
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Conducting Airways (upper) n Nasopharynx n Oropharynx n Laryngopharynx
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Conducting Airways (lower) n Larynx n Trachea –divides at the carina n Bronchi
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Conducting Airways (lower) n Lobar bronchi n Segmental bronchi n Subsegmental bronchi (nonrespiratory)
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Gas Exchange Airways (Respiratory Unit) n Subsegmental bronchi (respiratory) n Terminal bronchioles n Alveolar ducts n Alveoli
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Bronchial Walls n Epithelial lining –exocrine gland cells, ciliated cells n Smooth muscle n Connective tissue
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Alveoli n 25 (birth) 300 (adulthood) million n Where most gas exchange takes place –alveolocapillary membrane n Secretes surfactant
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Pulmonary Circulation n Facilitates gas exchange n Delivers nutrients to lung tissue n Reservoir for the left ventricle n Filter for the circulation n Less pressure & resistance than systemic –MAP 18 Vs 90 n 100 ml blood / 70-100 m 2 n Bronchial circulation pulmonary
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Thoracic Cavity n Chest wall n Diaphragm n Lungs n Pleura –visceral & parietal n Mediastinum n Heart & great vessels
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Volumes & Capacities n Alveolar dead space n Alveolar ventilation n Anatomic dead space –1 ml / pound, 33% of each breath n Dead-space ventilation n Functional residual capacity n Minute volume
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Volumes & Capacities (continued) n Physiologic dead space n Residual volume n Tidal volume n Total lung capacity n Vital capacity
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Control of Ventilation n Voluntary Vs involuntary n Respiratory center (brain stem) n Chemoreceptors
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Lung Receptors n Irritant –epithelium of conducting airways n Stretch (Herring-Breuer reflex) –smooth muscle of airways n J-receptors (juntapulmonary) –capillaries of alveolar septa
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Chemoreceptors n Monitor pH, Pa CO 2 & Pa O 2 n Central chemoreceptors –near respiratory center –sense change in pH by H + ion in CSF n Peripheral chemoreceptors n H + changes Pa CO 2 n CO 2 + H 2 O H 2 CO 3 HCO 3 + H +
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Chemoreceptors (continued) n ventilation Pa CO 2 n CO 2 diffuses across blood/brain barrier n H + pH n Center rate & depth of respiration n Center sensitive to small changes (1-2 Torr) n Chronic disease will desensitize receptor
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Chemoreceptors (continued) n Peripheral receptors n Aortic arch, aortic bodies, carotid bodies n Some sensitivity for Pa CO 2 & pH n Primarily react to Pa O 2 n Marked hypoxia (Pa O 2 <60 Torr) required
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Mechanics of Breathing n Muscles are usually for inspiration only n 2 major muscles –intercostal & diaphragm n Accessory muscles n sternocleidomastoid & scalenes
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Mechanics of Breathing (continued) n Alveolar surface tension –surfactant reduces it –Law of Laplace P= (2T/r) n Elasticity n Compliance
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Airway Resistance (Poiseuille’s Law) n 50-66% occurs in the nose n Next highest, oropharynx & larynx n Should be little in lung conducting airways n Except in: –edema –obstruction –bronchospasm
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Gas Transport n Intake of O 2 by Ventilation of the lungs n Diffusion of O 2 across PCM n Systemic capillaries get arterial blood n Diffusion of O 2 into cell n Diffusion of CO 2 into systemic capillaries n Pulmonary capillaries get venous blood n Removal of CO 2 by ventilation of the lungs
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Tests of Pulmonary Function n Spirometry –measures volumes and capacities n Diffusing capacity –measure ability for gas transport across PCM n Arterial blood gas analysis n Radiographs –chest x-ray
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Arterial Blood Gases n ArtVenous n pH 7.35-7.457.33-7.43 n P CO 2 mm Hg35-45 41-57 n P O 2 mm Hg80-10035-40 n HCO 3 - mEq/L 22-2624-28 n S O 2 96-98%70-75% n Base Excess-2 to +20 to +4
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Effects of Aging n Loss of elastic recoil n Stiffening of the chest wall n Alterations in gas exchange n Increases in flow resistance n All influenced other factors –environmental, disease, body size, race & gender
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S/S of Pulmonary Disease n Dyspnea –exertional, orthopnea, PND n Abnormal breathing patterns –Kussmaul, “purse lipped”, Cheyne-Stokes n Hypo/hyperventilation n Cough n Hemoptysis
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S/S of Pulmonary Disease (continued) n Cyanosis n Pain n Clubbing n Abnormal sputum
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Conditions Caused by Pulmonary Disease n Hypercapnia n Hyoxia n Acute respiratory failure n Pulmonary edema n Aspiration n Bronchiolitis
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Conditions Caused by Pulmonary Disease (continued) n Pneumothorax n Plural effusion n Pulmonary fibrosis n Pneumoconiosis
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Chronic Bronchitis n Occurs for at least 3 months, in 2 years n 20 X increase in smokers n Inflammation of bronchi (irritants/infection) n Muscle hypertrophy n Mucus gland hyperplasia n Inflammation n H. flu (Haemaphilus influenzae) & Streptococcus pneumoniae are common
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Emphysema n Permanent size of gas exchange airways n Destruction of alveolar walls n Obstruction from anatomical change n Primary- 1-2% of cases – 1 -antitrypsin deficiency (70-80% likelihood) n Secondary most common
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S/S of Emphysema n Dyspnea on exertion at rest n Often no cough and little sputum n Thin patient n Tachypnea n Prolonged expiration
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Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease n Includes chronic bronchitis & emphysema n Next to heart disease as cause of death in adults <65 n >33% of all VA patients have COPD n smoking is the primary cause
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Asthma n Reactive airways and bronchospasm n Extrinsic (most common) –mast cell activation –triggered by dust, mold, pollen, etc n Intrinsic –no known allergic cause –seen in adults >35 and often severe –triggered by drugs, irritants, infections, cold
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Asthma (continued) n Inflammation hyperresponsiveness n Thickening of airways –edema, vascular congestion, mucus n Muscle (bronchial) spasm
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Asthma (continued) n Sensation of chest constriction n Wheezing (inspiratory & expiratory) n Dyspnea n Cough (often non-productive) n Prolonged inspiration n Tachycardia n Tachypnea
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