Ribs naturally spring out and lungs naturally recoil inwards-linked by pleura in which they can achieve equilibrium. The components are BONE+MUSCLE+TISSUE and LUNGS
Volume when youre at the end of tidal breathing-when lugns and rib cage are at equilibrium (inwards recoil of lungs and outwards of ribs)
Pleural cavity is a fixed volume and negative pressure volume-contains a protein rich fluid. Negative pressure of pleural allows for lungs to be pulled with as the ribs expand out and up-lungs get bigger
If the chest wall is pierced, then air can fill the pleural cavity-loses stable volume and pleural cavity is compromised-elatic coil takes over and lung collapses. Heamothorax-same happens but slower
a. Total Lung Capacity
everything combined-from 0 to total. Max air volume
Vital Capacity
total of what can be inspired and expired-and its not TLC because minimal reserve volume TLC-RV
c. Functional Residual Capacity
volume of air left after a tidal breath-so respiratory reserve+max of what you can breath out after tidal (ERV): FRC=RV+ERV
d. Inspiratory Capacity
how much air you can theoretically take in after equilibrium volume (IRV)-TV+IRV or TLC-FRC
e. Reserve volume
Minimal amount of air in the lungs-that cannot be expired completely. TLC-VC
f. Expiratory reserve volume
Total amount of air left in the lungs you COULD BREATH OUT after a tidal breath-so FRV-RV
g. Inspiratory reserve volume (IRV)
Total amount of air that you can breath AFTER tidal breath-so IC-TV
Nasal breath-amount of inspiration and expiration to meet metabolic demand. End of TV marks the FRV
Because of dead space-two types alveolar and physiological. Physio is the bronchi and trachea space-not this. In this case, alveoli cannot be entirely emptied or they will collapse-cannot empty lung totally
Cm H2O usually
Between lungs/alveaolar and parietal/intrapleural cavity-trans pulmonary
Between intrapleural and outside chest wall-transmural pressure
Transrespiratory pressure-between alveolar and outside chest wall-tells if air goes in or out
Ventilator or CPR-air is pushed in instead of being pulled in
Pressure drops as chest wall expands-alveoli expand as transpulmonary pressure decreases-air goes IN due to negative pressure change-then eventually pressure gradient equalise at end of expiration
Part of the airway that does not participate in gas exchange-bronchi and some amount of alveoli
physiological-all that air that goes in cannot be exchanged with blood-in bronchi and trachea-dead space. Alveoli-collpased alveoli, or not perfused, or vital capacity-dead space
Around 150ml
Transchaotmy-going through trachea reduces the dead space 5(less trachea)
Ventilator-tube attatched to mouth so INCREASE dead space-cant gas exchange in tube
FVC-forced vital capacity, FEV1 is volume of air expelled in 1 second and FET (forced expiratory time-time taken to expel expel all the air from lungs
So a volume time aims to go from tidal breath to vital capacity-forcing it all out. Volume is the FVC, time it takes in FET. In 1 sec you get FEV1; FEV1/FVC gives fraction of how much of the air is expelled in 1sec-around 75% in healthy person
Chest wall naturally wants to expand and lung naturally wants to constrict-and the sum creates a sigmoidal relation of pressure vs volume. At first (from center), small changes in pressure easily acheave large volume changes (up to 6L)-but bigger the volume the harder that get. Hard (energy and effort) and inneficient to try and reduce the pressure below
Obstructive (COPD) means FEV1 is lower, FET is higher and FVC is lower-makes a long curve that goes lower (shift down and right). Fraction is LOWER-around 53%
Restrictive- (sarcoidosis)-thorax expantion difficult. FVC is LOWER, FEV can be high (cause airways are fine but less air), FET is usually lower (curve is short and lower-shift down and left). But because less air and fine airways-fraction is HIGHER (around 83%)