Respiratory Physiology Set 1

Q:1

A 4-year-old with severe pneumonia is intubated. Despite FiO₂ 1.0 and adequate ventilation (PaCO₂ 40 mmHg), PaO₂ remains 55 mmHg. Chest X-ray shows bilateral consolidation. What is the primary mechanism of hypoxemia?


A. Alveolar hypoventilation
B. Diffusion limitation
C. Intrapulmonary shunt
D. Increased dead space
E. Low inspired oxygen fraction

Answer:

C
Explanation:
Refractory hypoxemia despite high FiO₂ indicates shunt physiology, blood passing through non-ventilated alveoli. Oxygen therapy has limited effect in true shunt states.

Q:2

A ventilated child with severe asthma has rising PaCO₂ despite high minute ventilation. Capnography shows low end-tidal CO₂ compared with PaCO₂. What explains this gradient?


A. Increased shunt
B. Increased physiological dead space
C. Hypoventilation
D. Diffusion defect
E. Decreased CO₂ production

 

Answer:

B
Explanation:
Increased PaCO₂–ETCO₂ gradient reflects increased dead space. In asthma, airflow obstruction and uneven ventilation increase physiologic dead space.

Q:3

A 6-year-old with ARDS is ventilated in volume control mode. Plateau pressure is 32 cmH₂O, PEEP 12 cmH₂O, tidal volume 6 mL/kg. What does this indicate?


A. High airway resistance
B. Low lung compliance
C. Auto-PEEP
D. Air leak
E. Hyperinflation

Answer:

B

Explanation
Driving pressure = Plateau − PEEP = 20 cmH₂O (elevated), indicating reduced respiratory system compliance consistent with ARDS.

 

Q:4

A child with status asthmaticus has a peak inspiratory pressure (PIP) of 40 cmH₂O and a plateau pressure of 18 cmH₂O. What is the dominant abnormality?


A. Decreased compliance
B. Increased airway resistance
C. Low tidal volume
D. High PEEP
E. Pulmonary oedema

Answer:

B
Explanation:
A large difference between PIP and plateau pressure indicates elevated airway resistance. Compliance is reflected by plateau pressure, which is normal here.

Q:5

A 5-year-old with ARDS has PaCO₂ 60 mmHg and pH 7.28 while on lung-protective ventilation (VT 6 mL/kg). What is the rationale for tolerating this?

A. Prevent oxygen toxicity
B. Avoid barotrauma and volutrauma
C. Improve CO₂ clearance
D. Reduce sedation needs
E. Increase pulmonary blood flow

Answer:

B
Explanation:
Permissive hypercapnia allows low tidal volumes to minimise ventilator-induced lung injury. Mild acidosis is tolerated to protect the lung parenchyma.

Q:6

A ventilated asthmatic child becomes hypotensive. The flow-time waveform shows that expiratory flow does not return to baseline before the next breath. What is the most likely mechanism?


A. Hypovolemia
B. Increased intrathoracic pressure from auto-PEEP
C. Tension pneumothorax
D. Myocardial depression
E. Anaphylaxis

Answer:

B
Explanation:
Incomplete exhalation causes dynamic hyperinflation (auto-PEEP), increasing intrathoracic pressure, reducing venous return, and causing hypotension.

Q:7

A child with severe ARDS has: FiO₂ 0.9, Mean airway pressure 22 cmH₂O, PaO₂ 60 mmHg. What is the oxygenation index?


A. 15
B. 22
C. 30
D. 33
E. 45

Answer:

D
Explanation:
OI = (FiO₂ × MAP × 100) / PaO₂ = (0.9 × 22 × 100) / 60 = 33
OI >16–25 indicates severe disease; >40 is often considered for ECMO.

Q:8

A child with ARDS is transitioned to APRV. Oxygenation improves without increasing FiO₂. What is the primary mechanism?


A. Increased dead space
B. Reduced cardiac output
C. Increased mean airway pressure and alveolar recruitment
D. Decreased CO₂ production
E. Increased airway resistance

Answer:

C
Explanation:
APRV maintains prolonged high airway pressure, increasing mean airway pressure and promoting alveolar recruitment, improving oxygenation.

Q:9

A ventilated child develops sudden hypoxemia. Breath sounds are equal, CXR is normal, and ETCO₂ decreases abruptly. Most likely diagnosis?


A. Pneumonia progression
B. Pulmonary embolism
C. Atelectasis
D. ARDS worsening
E. Bronchospasm

Answer:

B
Explanation:
Sudden hypoxemia with a drop in ETCO₂ and a normal CXR suggests an acute increase in dead space, as seen in pulmonary embolism.

Q:10


In ARDS management, which parameter is most associated with mortality?
A. FiO₂ level
B. Peak inspiratory pressure
C. Driving pressure (Plateau − PEEP)
D. Respiratory rate
E. ETCO₂

Answer:

C

Explanation:
Driving pressure correlates strongly with mortality in ARDS. It reflects dynamic strain on the lung and is a key target in lung-protective ventilation.

Respiratory Physiology Set 1

Q:1 A 4-year-old with severe pneumonia is intubated. Despite FiO₂ 1.0 and adequate ventilation (PaCO₂ 40 mmHg), PaO₂ remains 55 mmHg. Chest X-ray shows bilateral consolidation. What is the primary mechanism of hypoxemia? A. Alveolar hypoventilationB. Diffusion limitationC. Intrapulmonary shuntD. Increased dead spaceE. Low inspired oxygen fraction Answer: CExplanation:Refractory hypoxemia despite high FiO₂ indicates shunt … Read more

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