PhysioEx Exercise 7 Activity 1 (1)

.pdf

School

Florida State College at Jacksonville *

*We aren’t endorsed by this school

Course

02821

Subject

Mechanical Engineering

Date

Apr 3, 2024

Type

pdf

Pages

6

Uploaded by DeanWillpower9312

Report
3/3/24, 1:25 PM PhysioEx Exercise 7 Activity 1 https://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_0media_ap/physioex/10/ex7/act1/ 1/6 PhysioEx Lab Report Exercise 7: Respiratory System Mechanics Activity 1: Measuring Respiratory Volumes and Calculating Capacities Name: Justice Canada Date: 3 March 2024 Session ID: session-2b418eb8-366a-a8a6-51f5-c8a699ef0e36 Pre-lab Quiz Results You scored 100% by answering 5 out of 5 questions correctly. Experiment Results Predict Question Which of the following statements describing the mechanics of breathing is false ? You correctly answered: Ventilation relies exclusively on contracting skeletal muscles. 1 The contraction of which of the following muscles will increase the thoracic cavity volume during inspiration? You correctly answered: the external intercostals. 2 At the beginning of inspiration, the You correctly answered: thoracic cavity volume increases. 3 At the beginning of expiration, the You correctly answered: pressure in the thoracic cavity increases. 4 A tidal volume refers to the You correctly answered: amount of air inspired and then expired with each breath under resting conditions. 5 Predict Question: Lung diseases are often classified as obstructive or restrictive. An obstructive disease affects airflow , and a restrictive disease usually reduces volumes and capacities . Although they are not diagnostic, pulmonary function tests such as forced expiratory volume (FEV ) can help a clinician determine the difference between obstructive and restrictive diseases. Specifically, an FEV is the forced volume expired in 1 second. 1 1 1
3/3/24, 1:25 PM PhysioEx Exercise 7 Activity 1 https://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_0media_ap/physioex/10/ex7/act1/ 2/6 Stop & Think Questions Experiment Data Radius (mm) Flow (ml/min) TV (ml) ERV (ml) IRV (ml) RV (ml) VC (ml) FEV (ml) TLC (ml) BPM 5.00 7485 499 ---- --- --- --- --- --- 15 5.00 7500 500 1200 3091 1200 4791 3541 5991 15 4.50 4920 328 787 2028 1613 3143 2303 4756 15 4.00 3075 205 492 1266 1908 1962 1422 3871 15 3.50 1800 120 288 742 2112 1150 822 3262 15 3.00 975 65 156 401 2244 621 436 2865 15 In obstructive diseases such as chronic bronchitis and asthma, airway radius is decreased. Thus, FEV will Your answer: decrease proportionately. 1 Which muscles contract during quiet expiration? You correctly answered: none of these muscles contract during quiet expiration. 1 Minute ventilation is the amount of air that flows into and then out of the lungs in a minute. Minute ventilation (ml/min) = TV (ml/breath) x BPM (breaths/min). Using the values from the second recorded measurement, enter the minute ventilation. You answered: 7500 ml/min. 2 A useful way to express FEV is as a percentage of the forced vital capacity (FVC). Using the FEV and FVC values from the data grid, calculate the FEV (%) by dividing the FEV volume by the FVC volume (in this case, the VC is equal to the FVC) and multiply by 100%. Enter the FEV (%) for an airway radius of 5.00 mm. You answered: 74 %. 3 1 1 1 1 1 A useful way to express FEV is as a percentage of the forced vital capacity (FVC). Using the FEV and FVC values from the data grid, calculate the FEV (%) by dividing the FEV volume by the FVC volume (in this case, the VC is equal to the FVC) and multiply by 100%. Enter the FEV (%) for an airway radius of 3.00 mm. You answered: 70 %. 4 1 1 1 1 1 1
3/3/24, 1:25 PM PhysioEx Exercise 7 Activity 1 https://media.pearsoncmg.com/bc/bc_0media_ap/physioex/10/ex7/act1/ 3/6 Baseline Airway radius = 5.00 mm Airway radius = 4.50 mm
Your preview ends here
Eager to read complete document? Join bartleby learn and gain access to the full version
  • Access to all documents
  • Unlimited textbook solutions
  • 24/7 expert homework help