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BIO 212 – Exam 4 Study Guide.

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BIO 212 – Exam 4 Study Guide/BIO 212 – Exam 4 Study Guide.

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  • January 18, 2022
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  • 2023/2024
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Bio 212 Course Notes – Exam 4

Ch 36-37 – Disorders of Respiratory and Ventilation/Gas Exchange
Ch 41-43 – Renal and Urinary Disorders
Ch 45-47 – GI Disorders


Ch 36 - Disorders of the Respiratory System

***Review Ch 35 for normal structure/function of the respiratory system

Respiratory infections

Pneumonias – inflammation of the parenchymal structures of the lung in the lower respiratory
tract
 4-10 million cases in the US per year
 6th leading cause of death
 Etiologic agents include infectious and non-infectious agents
o Inhalation or blood spread of pathogens
o Inhalation of irritating gases and fumes
o Aspiration of gastric contents
 Classified by type of agent and/or involvement
o Typical – multiplies within the alveoli
 Bacteria
o Atypical – multiplies in the septum
 Viral, fungal
o Lobar – confined to one lobe
o Broncho – more widespread
 Types of pneumonia
o Community acquired
 Infection occurs prior to hospitalization, diagnosed within 48 hours
 S. pneumoniae, H. influenza, S. aureus
 Influenza virus, RSV, adenovirus
o Hospital acquired
 Not present or incubating at the time of admission, occurs after 48 hours
 20-50% mortality rate
 P. aeruginosa, S.aureus, Enterobacter, Klebsilla, E.coli

, o Immunocompromised
 Humoral deficiency – bacterial
 Cellular deficiency – viral, fungal, mycobacteria, protozoa
o Acute bacterial
 Most common – S. pneumoniae
o Legionnaire Disease
 Discovered in 1976
 L. pneumophilia
o Primary atypical
 Most common – Mycoplasma pneumoniae
 Less severe than typical
 Manifestations:
o High fever, chills
o Fatigue
o Sputum producing cough, often greenish
o Bronchial inflammation
o Shortness and rapid breath due to decreased gas exchange
o Tachycardia
o Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea

 Complications (primarily bacterial)
o Sepsis
o Pleuritis, effusion

 Diagnosis
o Blood tests, chest x-rays, pulse oximetry, sputum testing

 Treatment
o Fluids and electrolytes
o Antibiotics
o Antiviral drugs
o Fever reducers
o Cough suppressants
o Possible hospitalization if severe

,Tuberculosis – bacterial infection caused by Mycobacteria tuberculosis which is spread by
airborne particles in respiratory fluids of individuals with active TB
 Foremost cause of death from a single infectious agent on the planet
 2 billion people infected globally
 9.4 million new cases per year
 2 million latent infections estimated
 Drug resistant strains are now common

 Primary TB
o Often asymptomatic
o Most develop a latent TB infection as the immune system walls off the bacteria in
granulomas called Ghon complexes
 Often found at the low end of the upper lobes or the high ends of the lower
lobes
 Obligate aerobes

 Secondary TB
o Reinfection or reactivation of the dormant bacteria
o Manifestations:
 Fever, weight loss, fatigue, cough, pleuritic
 Diagnosis
o Tuberculin skin tests
 False positives and false negatives
o Chest X-rays
o Bacteriologic studies of sputum or respiratory secretions
 Treatment
o Multiple drug therapy
o Prophylactic treatment for those at risk

, Ch 37 – Disorders of Ventilation and Gas Exchange

Disorders of Lung Inflation

Pleural effusion – abnormal collection of fluid in the pleural cavity
 Normally fluid enters cavity through capillaries in the parietal pleura, interstitial spaces
of the lungs and through small holes in the diaphragm and is removed by the lymphatic
vessels in the parietal pleura
o If formation exceeds removal – accumulation occurs
 Types and etiologies:
o Exudative – transudate or exudate
 Bacterial pneumonia, viral infections, pulmonary infarction, malignancies
o Empyema – fluid from infection, leukocytes, proteins, cellular debris
 Bacterial pneumonia, ruptured lung abscess, subdiaphragmatic infections
o Chylothorax – lymph filled with chylomicrons
 Trauma, inflammation, malignancies, obstruction
 Most common in the fetus and neonates
 Manifestations:
o Dyspnea
o Diminished breath sounds
o Hypoxemia
 Diagnosis: Chest imaging, thoracentesis
 Treatment: Treat underlying cause

Hemothorax – pleural effusion in which blood accumulates in the pleural cavity
 Etiologies: chest trauma, complications from surgery, malignancies, rupture of a great
vessel
 Minimal – ~250 mL, often clears in 10-14 days via normal reabsorption
 Moderate - ~1/3 of the pleural space, signs of lung compression and loss of BV
o Requires immediate drainage and fluid replacement
 Large - ~1/2 of the pleural space, often caused by a high pressure bleed
o Requires drainage and surgery to stop the bleed
 Manifestations:

Pneumothorax – presence of air in the pleural cavity – causes full or partial lung collapse
 Spontaneous
o No obvious cause – rupture of an air filled bleb on the lung surface
o Tall, smoking, family history
o Secondary – associated with lung disease

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