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What does the Respiratory system do?
Supplies O2 to the blood and gets rid of CO2 from blood
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What does the respiratory system consist of?
- Nose and Nasal Cavity
- Throat (pharynx)
- Voice Box (larynx)
- Windpipe (trachea)
- Bronchial tubes or tree
- Lungs
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What are the Respiratory System functions?
- Ventilation
- Cleaning and filtering air
- Gas exchange
- Gas transport
- Smell
- Speech
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What do Olfactory Epithelium do?
Detection of smell
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What two cells line the nasal cavity?
- Pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium
- Goblet cells
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What do the Pseudostratified Ciliated columnar epithelium and Goblet cells do?
- Large blood supply warms air
- Mucous (goblet cells) moistens air and traps dust
- Cilia move mucous towards pharynx
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What is the function of the Paranasal sinus?
Lightens skull and resonate voice
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What is the Pharynx and where does it extend to and from?
- The pharynx is a five inch ling muscular tube
- It extends from internal nares to the larynx
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What are the functions of the Pharynx?
- Passageway for food and air
- Resonating chamber for speech production
- Tonsils protect from infections
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What are the three distinct regions of the Pharynx?
- Nasopharynx
- Oropharynx
- Laryngopharynx
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Where does the Nasopharynx extend to and from?
Extends from internal nares to soft plate
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What connects the middle ear to the Nasopharynx?
auditory (Eustachian) tubes
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Which tonsils are in the roof of the Nasopharynx?
Adenoid or pharyngeal tonsils
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The Nasopharynx is the passageway for what?
Passageway for AIR ONLY
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What is the Nasopharynx lined with?
Lined with Pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium with golbet cells
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Where does the Oropharynx entend from and to?
Extends from soft palate to the epiglottis
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Which tonsils are found in the Oropharynx?
- Palatine tonsils found on side walls
- Lingual tonsils under the base of the tongue
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What is the Oropharynx a passage way for?
Food and air
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What cells line the Oropharynx?
Lined with Stratified Squamous Epithelium
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Where does the Laryngopharynx extend from and to?
- Extends from epiglottis to cricoid cartilage
- Ends at the esophagus inferiorly
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What is the Laryngopharynx a common passageway for?
Food and air
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What cells like the Laryngopharynx?
Lined with Stratified Squamous Epithelium
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How many cartliages make up the larynx?
- 9 cartilages
- singles (thyroid, cricoid, epiglottis)
- paired (arytenoid, corniculate, cuneiform)
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What are the three single cartilages of the Larynx?
Thyroid, Cricoid, Epiglottis
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What are the three paired cartilages of the Larynx?
Arytenoid, Corniculate, Cuneiform
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What contains the vocal cords or vocal folds?
The Larynx
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Where does the trachea extend from and to?
Extends from larynx into chest where it divides to form two bronchi
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What does the trachea has 16-20 of?
Incomplete C-shaped cartilage rings
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What cells line the trachea?
- Lined inside with Pseudostratified Ciliated Columnar Epithelium and Goblet Cells
- (Same as the nasal cavity)
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Which lung had the cardiac notch?
Left lung
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What are the names of the fissures in the right lung and how many lobes does the right lung have?
- Oblique fissure and Horizontal fissure
- resulting in 3 lobes of the right lung
- Inferior lobe, Superior lobe, middle lobe
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Name the fissures in the left lung and how many lobes does the left lung have?
- Oblique fissure
- resulting in 2 lobes of the left lung
- Superior lobe, inferior lobe
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Where do blood vessels and airways enter the lungs?
At the Hilum or Hilus
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What does the Hilum of the lungs form?
The roots of the lungs
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What are the lungs covered with?
Covered with the visceral pleura membrane
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Lung lobules are smaller compartments within lobes consisting of what?
- Terminal bronchioles (supply air to lobules)
- Aveolar ducts
- Aveloar sacs
- Extensive blood supply via capillary net
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What are the three types of Pneumocytes?
- Type I : Make the alveolar epithelium wall
- Type II : (Septal) Secrete Surfactant (chemical)
- Type III : Alveolar macrophage cells (cell eaters)
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How many layers are there in the respiratory membrane?
Six layers: Four tissue layers and two fluid layers
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What are the three functions of the respiratory membrane?
- Seperate the capillary blood from the alveolar air
- Allow O2 diffusion from alveolar air into capillary blood
- Allow CO2 diffusion from capillary blood into alveolar air
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What is ventilation called?
Negative draft ventilation
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What are the two terms for breathing in?
Inspiration or inhalation
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What are the two terms for breathing out?
Expiration or exhalation
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What is the pressure within the lungs called?
Alveolar pressure
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What is the pressure within the pleural cavities called?
- Intrapleural pressure
- Always less than atmospheric pressure
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What is the function of the intrapleural pressure?
To keep the lungs attached to the chest wall and inflated
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What is Boyle's Law?
- As the size of a closed container decreases, pressure inside increases. (volume decrease, pressure increase)
- As the size of the closed container increases, pressure inside decreases (volume increases, pressure decreases)
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What is quiet resting ventilation called?
Eupnea
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During pulmonary ventilation when does air move into the lungs?
When pressure inside the lungs is less than atmospheric pressure
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During Pulmonary Ventilation what happens to muscles and lungs when air moves into the lungs?
- Diaphragm and external intercostals enlarge the chest and reduce alveolar pressure to less than atmospheric pressure.
- Air drafts into lungs - negative draft
- Resting Inspiration or Inhalation
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During Pulmonary Ventilation when does the air move out of the lungs?
When atmospheric pressure is less than pressure inside the lungs
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During pulmonary ventilation what happens to the muscles and lungs when air is moved out of the lungs?
- Diaphragm and external intercostals muscles relax
- Chest gets smaller
- Elastic recoil of alveoli creates Alveolar pressure greater than atmospheric pressure
- Air is pushed or squeezed out of lungs
- Resting Expiration or Exhalation
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What happens in forced inspiration during forced ventilation?
- Diaphragm and external intercostal muslces contract more forcefully making the chest wider
- Results in deeper breaths
- Other back muscles become involved
- Require larger decreases in alveolar pressure
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What happens in forced expiration during forced ventilation?
- Diaphragm and external intercostal muscles relax
- Internal intercostal muslces contract compressing rib cage and making the chest narrower
- Abdominal muslces contract compressing abdomen and forcing the diaphragm to move up further
- Require larger increases in alveolar pressures
- Air is forced out
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What is lung volume?
Volume is one measurement of a quantity of air
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What is lung capacity?
Capacity is the sum of two or more volumes
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What is the device that measures lung volumes and capacities?
Spirometer
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What does the Spirometer record onto?
Spirogram
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What is Tidal Volume (VT)?
(VT) is the amount of dead air in one breath at rest
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When the Tidal Volume (VT) is 500 mL, how much of the 500 mL of air reaches the alveoli?
- 350mL reaches the alveoli and participates in gas exchange. The other 150mL remains in the conduction airways and is called Anatomic Dead Air.
- Anatomic Dead Air does not participate in gas exchange
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What is Inspiratory Reserve Volume (IRV)?
- Volume of air inspired in addition to Tidal Volume (VT)
- AKA yawning volume
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What is Expired Reserve Volume (ERV)?
- Volume of air expired in addition to Tidal Volume (VT)
- AKA sneeze or cough volume
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What is Residual Volume (RV)?
Volume of air that cannot be expired even with maximum forced expiration
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What is the lung capacity: Inspiratory Capacity (IC)?
- Inspiratory Capacity = Tidal Volume + Inspiratory Reverve Volume (yawning volume)
- IC=VT+IRV
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What is the lung capacity: Functional Residual Capacity (FRC)?
- Functional Residual Capacity = Expiratory Reserve Volume + Residual Volume
- (FRC)=ERV+RV
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What is the lung capacity: Vital Capacity (VC)?
- Vital Capacity = Tidal Volume + Inspiratory Reserve Volume + Expiratory Reserve Volume
- (VC)=VT+IRV+ERV
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What is the lung capacity: Total Lung Capacity (TLC)?
- Total Lung Capacity = Tidal Volume + Inspiratory Reserve Volume + Expiratory Reserve Volume + Residual Volume
- (TLC)=VT+IRV+ERV+RV
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What is FEV1?
- Forced Expiratory Volume in ONE second
- Represents the % of vital capacity that is forcedly expired in ONE second
- Should be 75% or higher in healthy adults
- Lower than 75% indicates airway obstruction, lung disease or weakness in respiratory muscles
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Gas exchange is done by way of what?
Diffusion
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What is the gas exchange in the lungs during external respiration?
- Diffusion of O2 from alveolar air into blood
- Diffusion of CO2 from the blood into alveolar air
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What is the gas exchange in the lungs during internal respiration?
- Diffusion of O2 from the blood into tissues
- Diffusion of CO2 from tissues into blood
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Describe the action of Diffusion?
Diffusion across the extremely thin respiratory membrane from higher concentration to lower concentration of gasses
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What is Dalton's Lae of partial pressure?
- In a mixture of gasses, the total pressure is equal to the sum of the pressures contributed by each individual gas
- These individual pressures are partial pressures
- Symbols for partial pressure of a gas in Pg where g stands for the specific gas
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What gasses are in our atmosphere?
Nitrogen (N), Oxygen (O2), Carbon Dioxide (CO2) and Water (H2O)
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What is the total pressure of out atmosphere?
- P=partial
- PN2+PO2+PCO2+PH2O=760 mmHg
- We are only concerned about
- PO2+PCO2=760 mmHg
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What are the partial pressures of O2 and CO2 in oxygenated arterial blood?
- PaO2 is the symbol for partial pressure of Oxygen in oxygenated (arterial) blood and is about 95 mmHg.
- PaCO2 is the symbol for partial pressure of Carbon Dioxide in oxygenated (arterial) blood and is about 40 mmHg
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What are the partial pressures of O2 and CO2 in deoxygenated venous blood?
- PvO2 is the symbol for partial pressure of Oxygen in deoxygenated (venous) blood and is about 40 mmHg
- PvCO2 is the symbol for partial pressure of Carbon Dioxide in deoxygenated (venous) blood and is about 45 mmHg
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More oxygen in the air results in what?
More oxygen in the blood
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What is Henry's Law?
- The amount of gas that will dissolve in a liquid is proportional to:
- 1. Partial Pressure of the Gas (% in air)
- 2. Solubility of the gas in the liquid (can not change)
- 3. Temperature of the liquid (temp of the blood)
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What carries 98.5% of O2 in the body?
- 98.5% of O2 is carried by the iron in hemoglobin (bound to iron)
- Hemoglobin (Hb) picks-up O2 in the lungs (loading) and delivers it to tissues (unloading)
- Loading - becomes oxyhemoglobin (Hb-O2) when it picks-up O2
- Unloads - becomes doexyhemoglobin (Hb-H) when O2 is delivered
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What carries 1.5% of O2 in the body?
Only 1.5% is dissolved in the plasma (mostly water)
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What does Iron have a affinity for?
- O2
- This affinity is greater in the lungs than in tissues
- When each Hb binds with 4 O2, Hb saturation with O2 is %100
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What are the PO2 main factors for loading and unloading?
- Lower PO2 in tissues favors unloading
- In the tissues PO2 is low and Hb-O2 releases O2
- In resting person, nearly 25% of O2 is unloaded
- Higher PO2 in the lungs favors loading
- In lungs alveoli PO2 is high and O2 binds to Hb
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What are the 5 main factors for loading and unloading of O2?
- PO2
- pH
- PCO2
- Temperature
- BPG (2,3 bisphisphoglycerate)
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What are the main factors for pH loading and unloading?
- Lower pH in the tissues favors unloading
- Hb has less affinity for O2 at lower pH
- -Bohr Effect
- Higher pH of lungs alveoli favors loading
- Hb has higher affinity for O2 higher pH
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What are the main factors for PCO2 loading and unloading?
- Higher PCO2 in the tissues favors unloading
- Related to pH as follows : always in water
- CO2 + H2O = carbonic acid
- CO2 + H2O = H2CO3 = H+ + HCO3-
- Weak grip / unloading Hb picks up more O2 in lungs.
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What are the main factors for Temperature loading and unloading?
- Higher temperature in tissues favors unloading
- Lower temperatures in lungs favors loading
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What are the main factors for BPG loading and unloading?
- BPG is produced by BRC's metabolism
- When BPG binds to Hb in tissues capillaries, Hb loosens its grip on O2 (unloading)
- Higher BPG favors O2 unloading into tissues
- Higher Metabolic rate, higher altitude and certain hormones increase BPG formation
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How does fetal Hb differ from adult Hb?
- Differs from adult Hb in structure and its higher affinity for binding O2
- Maternal blood in placenta has less O2 than normal oxygenated blood
- When PO2 is low, fetal Hb can still bind enough O2 due to the higher affinity
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How does CO2 bind and to what does it bind to?
- CO2 comes from car exhaust, tobacco smoke and fumes
- Binds to iron on the heme group to form carboxyhemoglobin (HbCO) instead of oxyhemoglobin.
- Binds 210 times more strong then O2
- 0.1% CO binds to 50% of total Hb molecules
- 0.2% CO binds to 100% of total Hb molecules and is lethal carbon monoxide poisoning.
- Treated by pure O2
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In CO2 transportation in what % and how is the CO2 transportated?
- 7% dissolved in the plasma
- 23% becomes Hb-CO2 (carbaminohemoglibin)
- 70% converted to H2CO3 by carbonic anhydrase enzyme
- H2CO3 dissociates into bicarbonate (HCO3-) (hooks to sodium), H+
- Bicarbonate transportated in plasma as sodium bicarbonate
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What does the Medullary Center control?
- Dorsal Respiratory Group - regulates both quiet and forced respiration (normal)
- Ventral Respiratory Group - Functions only during forced respiration (exercise)
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What does the Pons Centers control?
- Apneustic Center - produce prolonged inhalations (starts yawning)
- Pneumotaxic Center - protects against lungs over-inflation by inhibiting prolonges inhalation (ends yawning)
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What are the 5 factors affecting breathing?
- CO2
- O2
- Proprioceptors
- Inflation (hering-Breuer) Reflex
- Conscious Control
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How does increased CO2 affect breathing?
Hypercapnia (increased CO2) excites chemoreceptors in carotid arteries, aorta, and medulla oblongata and increases breathing rate (breathing faster)
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How does decreased O2 affect breathing?
Hypoxia (decreased O2) such as at high altitudes excited chempreceptors and increases breating rate (breathing faster)
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How do proprioceptors affect breathing?
- Muscle contractions and joint movement increase during exercise
- Increased stimulation of proprioceptors quickly increases breathing rate
- Happens as soon as an exercise starts
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How does the Inflation (Hering-Breuer) Reflex affect breathing?
- Lungs over-inflation activates stretch receptors
- Increase in nerve inpulses to Pons and Medulla inhibits apneustic and dorsal respiratory group
- Inhalation stops before lungs can be damages
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How does conscious control affect breathing?
Intentional breathing like when you hold your breath in a stinky bathroom or inhale to smell a perfume or aroma
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What is apnea?
No breathing
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What is dyspnea?
Painful breathing
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What is orthopnea?
- Labored breathing when lying down flat and is relieved by sitting up
- Pneumonia/CHF
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What is Hyperventilation?
rapid breathing over 20 RPM
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What is hypoventilation?
slow breathing under 10 RPM
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What are the 4 Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Diseases (COPD's)
- Chronic bronchitis - Inflammation of the bronchi
- Tuberculosis - Bacterial infection in the lungs
- Pneumonia - Fluid in the lung alveoli
- Emphysema - Destruction of lung alveoli
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What is Chronic Bronchitis?
- COPD's
- Inflammation of the bronchi
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What is Tuberculosis?
- COPD's
- Bacterial infection in lungs
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What is Pneumonia?
- COPD's
- Fluid in the lungs alveoli
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What is Emphysema?
- COPD's
- Destruction of lung alveoli
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