Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introductory Notes
- 1 Physiology of ventilation and gas exchange
- 2 Assessing the need for ventilatory support
- 3 Oxygen therapy, continuous positive airway pressure and non-invasive ventilation
- 4 Management of the artificial airway
- 5 Modes of mechanical ventilation
- 6 Oxygenation
- 7 Carbon dioxide balance
- 8 Sedation, paralysis and analgesia
- 9 Nutrition in the mechanically ventilated patient
- 10 Mechanical ventilation in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- 11 Mechanical ventilation in patients with blast, burn and chest trauma injuries
- 12 Ventilatory support: extreme solutions
- 13 Heliox in airway obstruction and mechanical ventilation
- 14 Adverse effects and complications of mechanical ventilation
- 15 Mechanical ventilation for transport
- 16 Special considerations in infants and children
- 17 Tracheostomy
- 18 Weaning, extubation and de-cannulation
- 19 Long-term ventilatory support
- 20 The history of mechanical ventilation
- Glossary
- Index
1 - Physiology of ventilation and gas exchange
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface
- Introductory Notes
- 1 Physiology of ventilation and gas exchange
- 2 Assessing the need for ventilatory support
- 3 Oxygen therapy, continuous positive airway pressure and non-invasive ventilation
- 4 Management of the artificial airway
- 5 Modes of mechanical ventilation
- 6 Oxygenation
- 7 Carbon dioxide balance
- 8 Sedation, paralysis and analgesia
- 9 Nutrition in the mechanically ventilated patient
- 10 Mechanical ventilation in asthma and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- 11 Mechanical ventilation in patients with blast, burn and chest trauma injuries
- 12 Ventilatory support: extreme solutions
- 13 Heliox in airway obstruction and mechanical ventilation
- 14 Adverse effects and complications of mechanical ventilation
- 15 Mechanical ventilation for transport
- 16 Special considerations in infants and children
- 17 Tracheostomy
- 18 Weaning, extubation and de-cannulation
- 19 Long-term ventilatory support
- 20 The history of mechanical ventilation
- Glossary
- Index
Summary
Among its many functions, the lung has two major ones: it must harvest oxygen to fuel aerobic respiration and it must vent acid-forming carbon dioxide. This chapter will offer a brief overview of how the lung fulfills these functions. It will also discuss some of the mechanisms through which adequate oxygenation can fail. A secure understanding of these principles allows an insight into the way in which mechanical ventilation strategies can be altered in order to enhance oxygenation and carbon dioxide clearance.
Functional anatomy of the lung
The airways
During inspiration, air is drawn into the oropharynx through either the mouth or the nasal airway. Nasal breathing is preferred, as it is associated with enhanced particle removal (by nasal hairs and mucus-laden turbinates) and humidification. However, this route is associated with a fall in pharyngeal pressure. Just as Ohm's law dictates that voltage is the product of current and resistance, so pharyngeal pressure is the product of gas flow and pharyngeal resistance. A ‘fat apron’ around the pharynx because of obesity may lead to increased pharyngeal compliance, and thus increase the risk of dynamic pharyngeal collapse in such patients. In adults, when pharyngeal flows exceed 30 to 40 litres per minute, the work of breathing becomes high and the fall in pharyngeal pressure too great for the adequate intake of air: the mouth then becomes the preferred route for breathing.
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- Core Topics in Mechanical Ventilation , pp. 1 - 20Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008