Prepare for NEET Biology Breathing And Exchange Of Gases with MCQs & PYQs on NEET.GUIDE. Enjoy free practice, previous year questions, and expert insights to master respiratory physiology.
A patient presents with significantly reduced lung compliance, making it difficult to inflate their lungs. Which of the following conditions is the LEAST likely cause of this decreased compliance?
Pulmonary fibrosis
Asbestosis
Emphysema
Infant Respiratory Distress Syndrome (IRDS)
A patient with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) experiences difficulty exhaling completely. Which of the following physiological changes is LEAST likely to contribute to this impaired exhalation?
Loss of elastic recoil in the lungs
Airway obstruction due to mucus and inflammation
Increased lung compliance
Collapse of smaller airways during exhalation
A patient presents with significantly reduced lung compliance and an inability to fully exhale. Microscopic examination of lung tissue reveals thickened alveolar walls and loss of elastic fibers. Which of the following conditions is the MOST likely diagnosis?
Emphysema
Asthma
Pulmonary fibrosis
Cystic fibrosis
A patient presents with significantly reduced lung compliance. Which of the following is LEAST likely to be the cause?
Pulmonary fibrosis
Emphysema (in later stages)
Increased surfactant production
Respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in newborns
A patient with emphysema exhibits increased lung compliance and a prolonged expiratory phase. Which physiological change BEST explains these findings?
Increased airway resistance due to bronchospasm
Loss of elastic recoil and airway collapse during expiration
Thickened bronchial walls and mucus plugging
Increased surfactant production leading to alveolar instability
A patient with pulmonary fibrosis exhibits reduced lung compliance. How would this condition MOST likely affect their respiratory volumes and capacities?
Increased inspiratory capacity and vital capacity
Decreased inspiratory capacity and increased residual volume
Increased tidal volume and decreased expiratory reserve volume
Decreased inspiratory capacity and vital capacity
Lungs do not collapse between breaths and some air always remains in the lungs which can never be expelled because
pressure in the lungs is higher than the atmospheric pressure
there is a negative pressure in the lungs
there is a negative intrapleural pressure pulling at the lung walls
there is a positive intrapleural pressure
Lungs do not collapse between breaths and some air always remains in the lungs which can never be expelled because
pressure in the lungs is higher than the atmospheric pressure
there is a negative pressure in the lungs
there is a negative intrapleural pressure pulling at the lung walls
there is a positive intrapleural pressure