Flashcards in Physiology Of Respiration Deck (34)
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1
What makes up the LRT
Trachea onwards
2
What is the name of the area of the lung which pulmonary nerve plexus and blood vessels and bronch enter
Hilum of the lung
3
Sympathetic nerves have what affect on bronchi?
Bronch dilation
4
What cells make up the alveoli?
Type 1 alveolar pneumocytes (squamous epithelium) and type 2 pneumocytes which secrete surfactant
5
Goblet cells release mucus to form a 10-15micrometer layer containing what?
Antitrypsins, lysozyme, IgA
6
What muscles make up the accessory respiratory muscles?
Scalene and sclaternomastoid muscles
7
What law means that we requires surfsctant to reduce surface tension otherwise transmittal pressure would collapse alveoli?
Laplace's law
Transmutation pressure = (wall tension * wall thickness)/radius
8
Mucus is made up of two layers called phases which are?
The deeper sol phase and the superficial gel phase
9
What does the central pattern generator of the medulla do?
Sets the basic rate and rhythm of breathing
10
What modulates the activity of the CPG?
Chemoreceptors, lung mechanoreceptors, cortex, limbicc system
11
The neurones for inspiration and expiration exhibit reciprocal inhibition, what does this mean?
Which one type is active it inhibits the opposite type and visa versa
12
What is the DRG responsible for?
Initiation of breathing with secondary help of the VRG. Also incorporates info from chemo and mechano receptors. Sends impulses down phrenic and intercostal nerves to the muscles of inspiration. Inhibited by pneumotaxic area
13
What is the VRG responsible for?
Secondary to DRG in initiating breathing, also contains centres for control of breathing in exercise I.e. Expiratory muscles
14
Voluntary motor control from cortical motor neurones travels via what?
The pyramidal tract
15
Alveolar PaCO2 usually is what?
5.3KPa / 40mmHg
16
What is normal alveolar PaO2?
13KPa / 105mmHg
17
What does raised PCO2 cause
Raised rate of ventilation and acidity which makes the chemoreceptors more sensitive to CO2 increases and thus causes greater increase in RR at lower PCO2
18
At what partial pressure does O2 become a respiratory drive?
8KPa / 60mmHg
19
Where are the central chemoreceptors located?
The venterolateral surface of the medulla where the CN IX and X exit
20
The central chemoreceptors detect what?
O2 and H+ therefore detecting CO2 indirectly. (H+ and HCO3 can't cross BBB therefore via equilibrium reaction CO2 when raised increases CSF acidity)
21
What percentage of CO2 stimuli is detected by the central chemoreceptors?
80% they are the primary modulator of normal healthy breathing
22
The peripheral chemoreceptors of the carotid bodies are formed by what two cell types?
Type 1 glomus sensory cell and type 2 sheath cell
23
The carotid bodies are in recanted by what nerve?
Glossopharyngeal CN IX
24
What innervates the aortic bodies?
The vagus nerve CN 10
25
What do the peripheral chemoreceptors detect?
PO2, PCO2, H+
26
Pain does what to breathing if only momentarily?
Apnea
27
Which receptors are responsible for the Hering-Breur reflex and are innervates by ehic nerve?
Stretch receptors innervates by the vagus. They inhibit the inspiratory centre
28
What do the juxto pulmonary receptors do?
Depress respiratory activity, causing shirt shallow breathing/apnea, reduction in HR, relaxation of skeletal muscle and laryngeal constriction
29
What stimulates the juxtapulmonary receptors?
Increased alveolar fluid, inflammation, micro embolisms and oedema
30