CHAPTER 2 Respiratory and Pulmonary Physiology
1 What is the functional residual capacity? What factors affect it?
Diaphragmatic muscle tone (individuals with paralyzed diaphragms have less FRC when compared to normal individuals)
Certain lung diseases in which elastic recoil is diminished (e.g., interstitial lung disease, thoracic burns, and kyphoscoliosis)
2 What is closing capacity? What factors affect the closing capacity? What is the relationship between closing capacity and functional residual capacity?
5 Discuss the factors that affect the resistance to gas flow. What is laminar and turbulent gas flow?
where R is resistance, L is the length of the tube, μ is the viscosity, and r is the radius of the tube. At higher flow rate (in obstructed airways and heavy breathing), the flow is turbulent. At these flows the major determinants of resistance to flow are the density of the gas (ρ) and the radius of the tube, r.
6 Suppose a patient has an indwelling 7-mm endotracheal tube and cannot be weaned because of the increased work of breathing. What would be of greater benefit, cutting off 4 cm of endotracheal tube or replacing the tube with one of greater internal diameter?
10 Review the different zones (of West) in the lung with regard to perfusion and ventilation
Zone 1: Alveolar pressure (PAlv) exceeds pulmonary artery pressure (Ppa) and pulmonary venous pressure (Ppv), leading to ventilation without perfusion (alveolar dead space) (PAlv > Ppa > Ppv).
Zone 2: Pulmonary arterial pressure exceeds alveolar pressure, but alveolar pressure still exceeds venous pressure (Ppa > PAlv > Ppv). Blood flow in zone 2 is determined by arterial-alveolar pressure difference.