Emphysema & COPD Pathophysiology
Asthma: Extrinsic VS Intrinsic
V/Q MISMATCH & DIFFUSION
CYSTIC FIBROSIS & CHRONIC CO₂ RETENTION
PNEUMOTHORAX, PLEURAL DISORDERS & ACUTE EMERGENCIES
100

Q1. A client with emphysema has hyperresonance on percussion and a flattened diaphragm. Which pathophysiologic change BEST explains these findings?

A. Increased surfactant production B. Loss of elastic recoil causing air trapping C. Bronchial smooth muscle hypertrophy D. Increased pulmonary capillary perfusion

B. Loss of elastic recoil causing air trapping

Emphysema destroys alveolar walls and the elastin fibers that normally allow the lungs to recoil during exhalation. Without elastic recoil, the bronchioles collapse prematurely during expiration, trapping air in the distal alveoli. This trapped air causes:

  • Hyperinflation → increased lung volume

  • Flattened diaphragm → diaphragm is pushed downward by overinflated lungs

  • Hyperresonance → excess air increases the percussion note

This is the hallmark of emphysema.

  • A: Surfactant is not increased; surfactant dysfunction is not the primary issue.

  • C: Smooth muscle hypertrophy is characteristic of asthma, not emphysema.

  • D: Emphysema reduces pulmonary capillary perfusion due to capillary destruction.

100

A child with extrinsic asthma develops bronchospasm after exposure to dust mites. Which immune mechanism is responsible?

A. IgG-mediated complement activation

B. IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation 

C. T‑cell cytotoxicity

D. Immune complex deposition

B. IgE-mediated mast cell degranulation

Extrinsic asthma is a type I hypersensitivity reaction. Allergen exposure triggers:

  1. IgE production

  2. IgE binds to mast cells

  3. Re-exposure → mast cell degranulation

  4. Release of histamine, leukotrienes, prostaglandins

  5. Bronchoconstriction, mucus production, airway edema

This is the classic allergic asthma pathway.

  • A, C, D: These describe type II, IV, and III hypersensitivity, not asthma.

100

Q11. A client with pneumonia has perfusion without ventilation. What is this called?

A. Dead space

B. Shunt

C. Hyperventilation

D. Diffusion block

In pneumonia, alveoli are filled with fluid, so they are perfused but not ventilated. This is a shunt — blood passes through the lungs without being oxygenated.

  • A: Dead space = ventilation without perfusion (PE).

  • C: Not a V/Q mismatch.

  • D: Not the correct physiologic term.

100

Q17. Why do clients with CF develop recurrent infections?

A. Excess surfactant

B. Thick mucus impairs ciliary clearance

C. Increased macrophage activity

D. Increased airway diameter

B. Thick mucus impairs ciliary clearance

Thick mucus traps bacteria and prevents normal mucociliary clearance → chronic infection.

  • A: Surfactant is not increased.

  • C: Macrophages are overwhelmed.

  • D: Airways narrow, not widen.

100

Q21. A client with tension pneumothorax has tracheal deviation. What causes this?

A. Lung hyperinflation

B. Air trapping in pleural space shifting mediastinum

C. Increased venous return

D. Bronchospasm

B. Air trapping in pleural space shifting mediastinum

Air enters pleural space and cannot escape → pressure builds → pushes mediastinum and trachea away from affected side.

200

Q2. A client with emphysema has a PaCO₂ of 58 mmHg and uses pursed‑lip breathing. What is the PRIMARY purpose of pursed‑lip breathing?

A. Increase respiratory rate

B. Create back‑pressure to prevent airway collapse

C. Strengthen the diaphragm

D. Reduce tidal volume

B. Create back‑pressure to prevent airway collapse

In emphysema, small airways collapse during expiration because of the loss of elastic recoil. Pursed‑lip breathing:

  • Creates positive end‑expiratory pressure (PEEP)

  • Prevents premature airway collapse

  • Improves CO₂ elimination

  • Reduces air trapping

  • Slows respiratory rate, improving ventilation efficiency

It is a compensatory technique that patients instinctively adopt.

  • A: Respiratory rate actually slows.

  • C: It does not strengthen the diaphragm.

  • D: Tidal volume often increases because breathing becomes more efficient.

200

Q7. Which trigger is MOST associated with intrinsic asthma?

A. Pollen

B. Cat dander

C. Cold air

D. Dust mites

C. Cold air

Intrinsic asthma is non‑immune mediated and triggered by:

  • Cold air

  • Exercise

  • Stress

  • Viral infections

  • Irritants

It does not involve IgE or allergens.

  • A, B, D: Classic extrinsic triggers.

200

Q12.

A client with pulmonary embolism has which V/Q pattern?

A. Low V/Q

B. High V/Q

C. Normal V/Q

D. Zero V/Q

B. High V/Q

PE blocks blood flow → ventilation without perfusion → dead space → high V/Q.

  • A: Low V/Q = pneumonia.

  • D: Zero V/Q = complete shunt.

200

Q18. A client with chronic CO₂ retention relies on which respiratory drive?

A. Central chemoreceptor CO₂ drive

B. Peripheral chemoreceptor hypoxic drive

C. Stretch receptor drive

D. Voluntary drive

B. Peripheral chemoreceptor hypoxic drive

Chronic CO₂ retention desensitizes central chemoreceptors. The body shifts to hypoxic drive, relying on low PaO₂ to stimulate breathing.

200

Q22. Which finding is MOST consistent with pleural effusion?

A. Hyperresonance

B. Dullness to percussion

C. Tympany

D. Crackles

B. Dullness to percussion

Fluid in pleural space → dullness, decreased breath sounds, decreased expansion.

300

Q3. A client with chronic bronchitis has polycythemia. What mechanism causes this?

A. CO₂ retention stimulates RBC production

B. Chronic hypoxemia triggers erythropoietin release

C. Mucus production destroys RBCs

D. Hypercapnia causes hemoconcentration

B. Chronic hypoxemia triggers erythropoietin release

Chronic bronchitis causes persistent airway obstruction from mucus, inflammation, and edema. This leads to chronic hypoxemia. The kidneys sense low oxygen levels and respond by releasing erythropoietin, which stimulates the bone marrow to produce more RBCs. This compensatory mechanism increases oxygen‑carrying capacity.

  • A: CO₂ retention does not stimulate erythropoiesis.

  • C: Mucus does not destroy RBCs.

  • D: Hemoconcentration is not the mechanism; RBC mass truly increases.

300

Q8. A client with asthma has a “silent chest.” What does this indicate?

A. Improvement

B. Severe airway obstruction with minimal airflow

C. Hyperventilation

D. Pneumonia

B. Severe airway obstruction with minimal airflow

A “silent chest” is an ominous sign. It means:

  • Airflow is so limited that no wheezing is produced

  • The client is tiring

  • Respiratory failure is imminent

This requires immediate intervention.

  • A: Not improvement.

  • C: Hyperventilation produces loud wheezing.

  • D: Pneumonia produces crackles, not silence.

300

Q13. Which condition MOST reduces diffusion capacity?

A. Increased surface area

B. Pulmonary edema

C. Increased partial pressure gradient

D. Increased hemoglobin affinity

B. Pulmonary edema

Pulmonary edema thickens the alveolar‑capillary membrane, increasing diffusion distance and impairing oxygen movement.

  • A & C: Improve diffusion.

  • D: Affects oxygen unloading, not diffusion.

300

Q19. Which oxygen saturation target is appropriate for chronic CO₂ retainers?

A. 100%

B. 95–100%

C. 88–92%

D. <80%

C. 88–92%

Higher saturations can suppress hypoxic drive → CO₂ narcosis. 88–92% maintains oxygenation without suppressing ventilation.

300

Q23. A client with pneumothorax suddenly becomes hypotensive. Why?

A. Increased preload

B. Compression of vena cava

C. Increased cardiac output

D. Increased lung compliance

B. Compression of vena cava

Tension pneumothorax compresses vena cava → decreased venous return → shock.

400

Q4. Which finding is MOST characteristic of emphysema rather than chronic bronchitis?

A. Cyanosis 

B. Productive cough

C. Increased AP diameter

D. Purulent sputum

C. Increased AP diameter

Emphysema causes hyperinflation due to air trapping. Over time, this expands the rib cage and increases the anterior‑posterior diameter, producing the classic barrel chest.

  • A & D: Cyanosis and purulent sputum are more typical of chronic bronchitis (“blue bloater”).

  • B: Chronic productive cough is the hallmark of chronic bronchitis.

400

Q9.

Which ABG is MOST consistent with early asthma exacerbation?

A. pH 7.50, PaCO₂ 30

B. pH 7.32, PaCO₂ 55

C. pH 7.40, PaCO₂ 40

D. pH 7.28, PaCO₂ 25

A. pH 7.50, PaCO₂ 30

Early asthma → hyperventilation due to anxiety and increased work of breathing. Hyperventilation blows off CO₂, causing:

  • Respiratory alkalosis (high pH)

  • Low PaCO₂

As the attack worsens, CO₂ rises (respiratory acidosis).

  • B: Late asthma with fatigue.

  • C: Normal.

  • D: Metabolic acidosis compensation.

400

Q14. A client with ARDS has severe hypoxemia unresponsive to oxygen. What is the cause?

A. Decreased respiratory rate

B. Widespread shunting

C. Increased dead space

D. Increased surfactant production

B. Widespread shunting

ARDS fills alveoli with protein‑rich fluid → no ventilation despite perfusion → shunt. Oxygen cannot reach blood even with 100% FiO₂.

  • C: Dead space is PE.

  • D: Surfactant is decreased, not increased.

400

Q20. Which finding is MOST concerning in CF?

A. Chronic cough

B. Purulent sputum

C. Hemoptysis

D. Tachypnea

C. Hemoptysis

Hemoptysis indicates erosion of bronchial vessels from chronic infection and inflammation. It can be life‑threatening.

400

Which intervention is PRIORITY for tension pneumothorax?

A. Chest x‑ray

B. Needle decompression

C. High‑flow oxygen

D. ABG analysis

B. Needle decompression

Tension pneumothorax is fatal within minutes. Needle decompression immediately relieves pressure. Imaging delays treatment.

500

Q5. A client with emphysema has decreased diffusing capacity (DLCO). Which structural change causes this?

A. Thickened alveolar membrane

B. Loss of alveolar surface area

C. Increased pulmonary blood flow

D. Increased mucus production

B. Loss of alveolar surface area

Emphysema destroys alveolar walls and capillary beds, dramatically reducing the surface area available for gas exchange. DLCO directly measures how well gases diffuse across the alveolar‑capillary membrane, so loss of surface area → decreased DLCO.

  • A: Thickening occurs in pulmonary edema or fibrosis, not emphysema.

  • C: Perfusion decreases in emphysema.

  • D: Mucus is a chronic bronchitis feature.

500

Q10. Which finding differentiates extrinsic from intrinsic asthma?

A. Bronchoconstriction

B. Mucus production

C. IgE involvement

D. Airway hyperresponsiveness

C. IgE involvement

Only extrinsic asthma is IgE-mediated. Intrinsic asthma has the same symptoms but no allergic component.

  • A, B, D: Occur in both types.

500

Q15. Which ABG indicates V/Q mismatch from early pneumonia?

A. Low PaO₂, low PaCO₂

B. High PaO₂, high PaCO₂

C. Normal PaO₂, high PaCO₂

D. Low PaO₂, high PaCO₂

A. Low PaO₂, low PaCO₂

Early pneumonia → hypoxemia → tachypnea → blowing off CO₂ → low PaCO₂.

  • D: Occurs later when fatigue sets in.

500

Q16. A client with emphysema has hyperresonance on percussion and a flattened diaphragm. Which pathophysiologic change BEST explains these findings?

A. Increased surfactant production

B. Loss of elastic recoil causing air trapping

C. Bronchial smooth muscle hypertrophy

D. Increased pulmonary capillary perfusion

B. Loss of elastic recoil causing air trapping

Emphysema is defined by destruction of alveolar walls and the elastin fibers that normally allow the lungs to recoil during exhalation. When elastin is lost:

  • The bronchioles collapse prematurely during expiration, especially during forced exhalation.

  • This traps air in the distal alveoli, leading to progressive hyperinflation.

  • Hyperinflation pushes the diaphragm downward, causing the classic flattened diaphragm seen on imaging.

  • Excess air in the thorax produces hyperresonance on percussion because sound travels more easily through air than through tissue.

This is the fundamental mechanical problem in emphysema: the lungs can get air in, but they cannot get air out.

Why the other options are wrong:

  • A: Surfactant is not increased in emphysema; surfactant dysfunction is not the primary pathology.

  • C: Smooth muscle hypertrophy is a hallmark of asthma, not emphysema.

  • D: Emphysema actually reduces pulmonary capillary perfusion because capillary beds are destroyed along with alveolar walls.

500

Q25. Pleural effusion impairs ventilation by:

A. Filling alveoli with fluid

B. Increasing intrapleural pressure and restricting lung expansion

C. Destroying alveolar walls

D. Causing bronchoconstriction

B. Increasing intrapleural pressure and restricting lung expansion

Fluid in pleural space compresses lung tissue → prevents expansion → reduces ventilation.

M
e
n
u