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Hey everyone,
I have a quick question about pulmonary physiology. Our lung dynamics syllabus has this passage:
My understanding is that dynamic hyperinflation is when a prolonged tau due to high resistance or compliance (like COPD) traps more air with each subsequent breath. The "air trapping effect" where trapped air causes volume to increase, decreasing compliance, is a homeostatic mechanism which opposes dynamic hyperinflation. However, in patients with bad disease, the air trapping effect cannot overcome the prolonged tau.
Do I have this right? Or is the syllabus right, and I'm missing some detail?
I have a quick question about pulmonary physiology. Our lung dynamics syllabus has this passage:
This doesn't make sense to me. If compliance decreases, tau should decrease, and therefore the patient should breathe easier. Thus, the air trapping effect should be homeostatic in nature. The way that this syllabus is written makes it sound as if the decrease in compliance causes a vicious cycle.The time constant is defined as τ = R x C. Alveoli with long time constants empty slowly. As a result, during exercise when the respiratory rate increases, these alveoli dont fully empty: air becomes trapped inside, lung volume increases, compliance further decreases and these individuals report marked shortness of breath (a process known as dynamic hyperinflation).
My understanding is that dynamic hyperinflation is when a prolonged tau due to high resistance or compliance (like COPD) traps more air with each subsequent breath. The "air trapping effect" where trapped air causes volume to increase, decreasing compliance, is a homeostatic mechanism which opposes dynamic hyperinflation. However, in patients with bad disease, the air trapping effect cannot overcome the prolonged tau.
Do I have this right? Or is the syllabus right, and I'm missing some detail?