Respiratory System Flashcards

1
Q

Where are the lungs housed?

A

in pleural sac in rib cage

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2
Q

What is the diaphragm?

A

The muscle responsible for inhalation and exhalation

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3
Q

Describe how inhalation occurs

A

Diaphragm contracts, expansion in the interpleural space and an increase in negative pressure occurs, therefore air enters the lungs

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4
Q

Describe how exhalation occurs

A

Diaphragm relaxes, decrease in interpleural space, positive pressure occurs and so air exits the lungs

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5
Q

What keeps the trachea open?

A

Cartilage rings on the outside which are for protection

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6
Q

Name the purposes of bronchi and cilia. When are cilia non functional?

A

1) Produce mucus via goblet cells to trap dirt particles and microorganisms
2) continuously cleared by cilia to pharynx and then swallowed
3) Cilia are non function in smokers

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7
Q

What does the bronchi branch to become?

A
Bronchioles (no cartilage rings)
which branch to 
alveolar ducts 
which branch to
alveoli
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8
Q

Number of alveoli and surface area?

A

about 500 million

70m(squared)

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9
Q

What do alveoli form?

A

Grape-like clusters called alveolar sacs

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10
Q

What are alveolar macrophages?

A

Phagocytic cells used for defence

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11
Q

How many alveolar macrophages are there?

A

12-14 in each alveoli

so 12-14 x 500million

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12
Q

What tends to accumulate in alveolar macrophages?

A

Basic drugs and macrolides

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13
Q

Continuous drug accumulation in AMs can cause

A

Phospholipidosis

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14
Q

When is the efficiency of bacterial phagocytosis in the lungs compromised?

A

In smokers and COPD patients

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15
Q

Diffusion is faster or slower in water?

A

Slower

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16
Q

Diffusion is directly proportional to?

A

surface area and membrane permeability

17
Q

Diffusion also depends on..

A

the magnitude of the concentration gradient

18
Q

What is carbonic anhydrase?

A

Fastest enzyme known. Important for CO2 elimination.

19
Q

How is CO2 mostly transported?

A

By the blood in the form of HCO3-

happens via carbonic anhydrase

20
Q

Name the first three steps of gas exchange (8 total)

A

1) Inhalation
2) Diffusion of 02 from alveoli to lung capillary
3) O2 diffuses to red blood cell and binds to haemoglobin

21
Q

What happens in steps 4-8 of gas exchange?

After the red blood cell has O2 binded to its haemoglobin

A

4) O2 leaves haemoglobin and and diffuses into a tissue from a systemic capillary
5) CO2 diffuses from tissues to capillaries and is converted to HCO3- in erythrocytes
6) HCO3- travels in plasma and is then made to CO2
7) Diffusion of CO2 from capillary wall into alveoli
8) Exhalation

22
Q

Describe the chosen treatment for respiratory disease such as ashtma and COPD

A

Dry powder inhalers

Metered dose inhalers- salbutamol and salmeterol

23
Q

What does salmeterol do?

A

Treat the constriction of the airways

24
Q

Name the two components of (brand name) Seretide

A

Salmeterol and Fluticasone

25
Q

What is Fluticasone?

A

A corticosteroid

26
Q

Advantages of pulmonary absorption?

A

Rapid due to large surface area of lungs (instantaneous absorption)
Avoids first pass metabolism
Local application at the site of action

27
Q

Disadvantages of pulmonary absorption?

A

Commonly only 2-10% of dose is deposited in the lungs. 90% of the dose is swallowed.