video thumbnail

Ventilation Perfusion Ratio (V/Q)

Duration: 29:43

Write A New Comment

2 Comments

...

vaishalibhatia04@*.com

Jun 21 2019, 8:50 pm

In a video u said that smaller alveoli are not stable and now u r saying they are more complaint and better than larger . I am not getting this point of yours . 

Plz comment on it .

...

mobeen@*.com

Jun 21 2019, 8:03 pm

Smaller alveoli are like tiny balloons and we know that they tend to collapse more than the larger alveoli. However, because they are compliant and have radial traction etc. they are stabilized back to the normal. If we have any condition (e.g. inappropriate amount of surfactant, connective tissue destruction, etc.) where we cannot pull them back to the normal size then they will collapse.

...

gkikat@*.com

Feb 24 2019, 7:38 pm

Dr, Mobeen,

When you compare the pressure of the blood vessel (arterial / venous) to that of the alviolar pressure, the alviolar pressure refers to the pressure of alvioli during inspiration when it is filled with air? 

This video discusses: Alveolar ventilation Blood flow through lungs Calculating the ratio Evaluating the V/Q ratio Generalizations

Following answers are created by ChatGPT. Occasionally the answer may be harmful, incorrect, false, misleading, incomplete, or limited in knowledge of world. Please contact your doctor for all healthcare decisions. Also, double check the answer provided by the AI below.

Please login to access this content.

Don't have an account?

Start Your Free trial

No credit card information needed.

Instructors

Dr. Mobeen Syed

Dr. Mobeen Syed

MD., MSc., MSc., BSc

Mobeen Syed is the CEO of DrBeen Corp, a modern online medical education marketplace. Mobeen is a medical doctor and a software engineer. He graduated from the prestigious King Edward Medical University Lahore. He has been teaching medicine since 1994. Mobeen is also a software engineer and engineering leader. In this role, Mobeen has run teams consisting of hundreds of engineers and millions of dollars of budgets. Mobeen loves music, teaching, and doing business. He lives in Cupertino CA.

Respiratory Physiology

Related Videos