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PRESENTER: Hello, and
welcome to Byte Size Med.
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This video is on
the breathing cycle.
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The breathing cycle
involves air going
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into the lungs during
inspiration and air
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leaving the lungs
during expiration.
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During this cycle, there are
pressure and volume changes.
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In this video, we're going to
put pressure and volume together
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and see what happens during
one cycle of respiration.
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There are three phases.
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There's rest where there's
no airflow, inspiration
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where air enters, and
expiration where air leaves.
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Now, we're going to
use this schematic lung
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to try and understand it.
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The lungs are surrounded
by pleural cavities
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lined by pleura.
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There's an inner
visceral layer, which
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is sort of attached
to the lungs,
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and the outer parietal layer,
which is towards the chest wall.
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Now, the pleural cavity
is filled with fluid.
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This fluid acts like a lubricant
and helps the lungs move
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during respiration.
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The pressure in
the pleural space,
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that's the intrapleural
pressure, or just simply
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pleural pressure.
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Now, the air is going to
enter through the airways
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into the alveoli.
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The pressure in the alveoli
is the alveolar pressure.
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So we've got the pleural
pressure and the alveolar
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pressure.
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Now, the difference between
these two pressures--
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that is the pressure
across the organ.
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That's the transmural pressure.
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Since we're talking
about the lungs,
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it's the transpulmonary
pressure.
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The pressures are in
centimeters of water
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and are in relation to
atmospheric pressure.
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To understand it, we consider
atmospheric pressure to be 0.
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So that's our
reference pressure.
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Air moves along a pressure
gradient from high pressure
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to low pressure.
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So that's what drives
the air to move
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between the lungs
and the atmosphere.
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First, let's look
at the volumes.
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There are four lung volumes--
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the inspiratory reserve
volume, the tidal volume,
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the expiratory reserve volume,
and the residual volume.
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The air that enters or
leaves the lungs just
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while quietly breathing
in and breathing out,
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that's the tidal volume, which
is around 500 milliliters.
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So what's left behind after
the tidal volume leaves?
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The expiratory reserve volume
and the residual volume,
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which together form the
functional residual capacity,
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the FRC.
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So that is the air
that gets left behind
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after quietly
breathing out, and it's
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the air that's in the
lungs in a state of rest.
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So at rest, the
volume in the lungs
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is at functional
residual capacity.
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During inspiration, 500 mL
of air enters the lungs,
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and during expiration, that
500 mL leaves the lungs.
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For this to happen,
pressures have to change.
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And now we're going to
add in the pressures.
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So let's start at rest.
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The volume is at FRC,
like I said before.
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The chest wall, it
has a natural tendency
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to want to pull outwards,
and the lungs have a tendency
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to want to collapse inwards.
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At this point, these two forces,
they balance each other out.
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The pressure in the
pleural space at rest
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is slightly negative at
minus 5 centimeters of water.
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That keeps the lungs open.
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The pressure in
the alveoli is 0,
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equal to that of the atmosphere.
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Remember, we consider
the atmosphere to be 0,
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and that's our reference.
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So now there's no gradient.
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There's no airflow.
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And the system is
at equilibrium.
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So this is the
situation at rest.
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Now, when inspiration
begins, the diaphragm
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is going to contract.
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The lungs expand.
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And so the alveolar pressure
becomes slightly negative.
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It's going to go down to
minus 1 centimeters of water.
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So now there's a gradient
between the atmosphere
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and the alveoli.
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And the alveolar pressure is
lower than the atmosphere.
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So the air is going
to enter the lungs.
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The fact that the chest
wall is expanding,
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that makes the pleural
pressure more negative.
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So it goes down
from it's negative 5
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to minus 7.5
centimeters of water.
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At the end of inspiration,
the alveolar pressure
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goes back up to 0.
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So now 500 mL of air
has entered the lungs,
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and the volume in
the lungs would now
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include both the functional
residual capacity
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and the tidal volume.
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Now, unlike
inspiration, which was
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active from muscles contracting,
expiration is passive.
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It's from elastic recoil.
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So the alveolar
pressure now becomes
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slightly positive at plus
1 centimeters of water.
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Now you can see that the
gradient has reversed.
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So air is going to move
in the opposite direction.
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From high to low pressure,
it moves from the lungs
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to the atmosphere.
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So it leaves the
lungs, and what's
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left behind is now the
functional residual capacity
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again.
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And at the end of expiration,
the pleural pressure
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comes back up to minus
5 centimeters of water.
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So now we're at rest again.
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So we've completed
one breathing cycle.
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And the cycle is
going to repeat again.
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So this is rest, the
phase of inspiration,
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and the phase of expiration.
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What happened to the volume?
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The volume of air that
entered, or the volume change,
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was from 0 to 500 milliliters.
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And then that 500 mL left
and it came back to 0.
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We're talking about
a volume change.
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The actual volume at rest was
the functional residual capacity
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and not 0, but the change that
happened, that was by 500 mL.
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For that 500 mL to
enter, what happened
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to the alveolar pressure?
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It went from 0 at
rest down to minus 1,
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came back to 0 at the
end of inspiration.
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Then for the 500 mL to
leave, it went to plus 1
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and then came back to 0 again.
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The pleural pressure went from
minus 5 at rest to minus 7.5
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at the end of inspiration and
then came back up to minus 5
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again.
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But there's one more pressure,
the transpulmonary pressure.
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It's the alveolar pressure
minus the pleural pressure.
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So if we take rest,
end of inspiration,
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and end of expiration,
at rest you
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can see it's 0 minus of minus 5.
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That's plus 5 centimeters
of water at rest.
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By the end of inspiration,
it's plus 7.5.
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And then it comes back to plus 5
again at the end of expiration.
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So throughout the breathing
cycle, it's positive.
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As long as the transpulmonary
pressure remains positive,
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the airways stay open.
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When the transpulmonary
pressure becomes negative,
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airways collapse.
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And that's what happens during
one cycle of respiration.
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If this video helped
you, give it a thumbs up,
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and subscribe to my channel.
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Thanks for watching, and
I'll see you in the next one.